Nicole Ameline
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Nicole Ameline | |
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Member of the National Assembly of France for Calvados's 4th constituency | |
In office 1988–2017 | |
Ministre de la parité et de l'égalité professionnelle | |
In office 31 March 2004 – 31 May 2005 | |
Ministre déléguée à la parité et à l'égalité professionnelle | |
In office 17 June 2002 – 30 March 2004 | |
Secrétaire d'État à la mer | |
In office 7 May 2002 – 16 June 2002 | |
Secrétaire d'État à la décentralisation | |
In office 18 May 1995 – 7 November 1995 | |
Vice president of the Regional Council of Basse-Normandie | |
Assumed office 16 March 1998 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Saint-Vaast-en-Auge, France | 4 July 1952
Political party | The Republicans |
Alma mater | University of Caen Normandy |
Committees | Foreign Affairs Committee |
Nicole Ameline (born July 4, 1952 in Saint-Vaast-en-Auge) is a French politician, lawyer, diplomat and women's rights advocate. She served as a member of the National Assembly of France for several terms between 1991 and 2017, and held various roles in the Government of France from 1995; she was Minister of the Sea in 2002 and Minister of Gender Equality from 2002 to 2005. She has been a member of the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women since 2008 and was the committee's chairperson from 2013.[1]
She represented the department of Calvados as a member of The Republicans.[2]
Biography
Titled a Doctor of law, specialising in the environment, she entered the office of the Minister for the Environment, Michel d'Ornano. A powerful man from Calvados, he convinced her to invest in her native department. After administrative posts at Hornfleur then on the Conseil Général du Calvados, she entered politics as deputy to Michel d'Ornano on the National Assembly of France in 1988, and took over from him on his death in 1991.
In 1993, with Yves Boisseau as deputy, she was elected with a large majority in the second round on the UDF ticket. She was opposed by a National Front candidate, and on the left by Corinne Lepage, who failed to qualify for the second round.
In May 1995 with the victory of Jacques Chirac, she left her post in order to enter the Government of Alain Juppé. The same year, she headed the Hornfleur Majorité Présidentielle list for the municipality, but lost by 37 votes to an independent ecologist. She left the government in November with the other "Juppettes" and she easily regained her seat in December.
Re-elected following the dissolution of 1997, she was the only member on the Calvados right. The following year, she joined the Regional Council of Lower Normandy, as Vice President, deputy to René Garrec, president of the region since 1986.
Re-elected as a member in 2002 under the banner of the Union pour la majorité présidentielle, newly created from the UMP, she was a minister in the Raffarin government, responsible for the Sea for one month, then had full responsibility for Parity and Professional Equality, up until Jean-Pierre Raffarin's resignation on 31 May 2005.
References
- ^ “We have to make next year a great year for transformation” – Nicole Ameline, Chair of the CEDAW Committee, UN Women
- ^ Office of the Secretary General (2012). "Nicole Ameline". Assemblee-nationale.fr (in French). National Assembly of France. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
- 1952 births
- Living people
- Politicians from Normandy
- People from Calvados (department)
- Republican Party (France) politicians
- Liberal Democracy (France) politicians
- Union for French Democracy politicians
- The Republicans (France) politicians
- Modern and Humanist France
- Government ministers of France
- Secretaries of State of France
- United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women members
- Women members of the National Assembly (France)
- Deputies of the 13th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic
- Deputies of the 14th National Assembly of the French Fifth Republic
- 21st-century women politicians
- Women government ministers of France
- University of Caen alumni
- French officials of the United Nations
- Union for a Popular Movement politician stubs