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Ursula Stenzel

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Ursula Stenzel

Ursula Stenzel (born September 22, 1945 in Leopoldstadt, Vienna) is an Austrian politician who was a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from 1996 to 2006. Until September 2015, she was a member of the Austrian People's Party. She is also a former member of the bureau of the European People's Party, and sat on the European Parliament's Committee on Foreign Affairs.

She is also chair of the delegation for relations with the Korean Peninsula, a member of the Subcommittee on Security and Defence, and a substitute for the Committee on Budgetary Control and the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs.

Since 2005, Stenzel has been Bezirksvorsteherin (district mayor) of Innere Stadt, Vienna's downtown district. She stepped down after the 2015 elections and was succeeded by Markus Figl (ÖVP).

Family

Stenzel was born in a Catholic family of Jewish descent. Her father was engineer of the North railway, Stenzels mother was the daughter of a hazzan and granddaughter of a rabbi, both from the synagogue in the Rotensterngasse in Leopoldstadt, the second municipal disctrict of Vienna. [1]

Career

  • Studied journalism, political science and modern history
  • Journalist and presenter at ORF (1972–1999)
  • Member of the European Parliament
  • Delegation member, EU-Poland Joint Parliamentary Committee (1997–2002)
  • Delegation Chair, EU-Czech Republic Joint Parliamentary Committee (2002–2004)
  • Schuman Prize

Controversies

Protests against about fixed closing hours

Stenzel has been criticised by local and national artists for her conservative positions and most notably for her outspoken support of a closing hour in Vienna's 1'st district ("Innere Stadt"). This culminated in a satirical video which covered the Duck Sauce hit "Barbra Streisand". This video became known as Ursula Stressned (Ursula don't stress) and gained wide popularity within days and became a YouTube fad.[2][3]

Switch to Austrian Freedom Party

Shortly before the 2015 Vienna Elections, Stenzel switched from the christian-conservative Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) to the right-populist Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ), because the ÖVP executive committee had decided not to endorse her district mayor candidacy for another term.[4] However, the FPÖ came only in third, with the ÖVP getting the relative majority of the First-District vote.[5]

References

  1. ^ https://derstandard.at/2330361/Ich-will-Wien-die-Urbanitaet-zurueckgeben Interview with Ursula Stenzel] in the Austrian Newspaper Der Standard (March 29, 2007. Retrieved May 31, 2017): "Mein Urgroßvater war Rabbiner, mein Großvater Kantor in der Synagoge in der Rotensterngasse" (My great-grandfather was a rabbi, my grandfather a cantor in the synagogue in the Rotensterngasse).
  2. ^ "Ursula Stressned" als YouTube-Protest. Mit einem viralen Musikvideo wehrt sich die Wiener Club-Szene gegen Sperrstunden In: Kurier, am 16.02.2011, 20:49
  3. ^ „Ursula stress ned“: Protestsong gegen Sperrstunden Die Presse, 16.02.2011
  4. ^ "HC Strache/Ursula Stenzel: Gemeinsam für eine bürgerlich-liberale Mehrheit in Wien". www.ots.at. Austria Press Agency. 1 September 2015. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  5. ^ Official final result of the 2005 elections in Vienna's First District