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facts about beate hartinger klein.html

21 Facts About Beate Hartinger-Klein

facts about beate hartinger klein.html1.

Beate Hartinger-Klein was born on Beate Hartinger; 9 September 1959 and is an Austrian healthcare and insurance manager, educator and politician.

2.

From December 2017 to May 2019, Hartinger-Klein served as minister of social affairs in the first government of Chancellor Sebastian Kurz.

3.

Beate Hartinger-Klein, nee Hartinger, was born on 9 September 1959 in Graz.

4.

Beate Hartinger-Klein attended primary school from 1966 to 1970 and middle school from 1970 to 1974.

5.

Beate Hartinger-Klein completed her secondary education at a commercial academy, a type of five-year high school similar to a gymnasium but with added business-oriented vocational training.

6.

From 1984 to 1985, Beate Hartinger-Klein was employed as a case manager in a tax accountancy firm.

7.

Beate Hartinger-Klein lectured at the Vienna University of Economics and Business, the University of Vienna, the UAS Krems, the UAS St Polten, and her alma mater, the University of Graz.

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8.

Beate Hartinger-Klein's responsibilities included managing the multitude of contractual relationships the Association maintained with physicians, pharmacies, and the pharmaceutical industry.

9.

Beate Hartinger-Klein was in charge of matters of employment law, job training, institutional self-governance, and the sector's international relationships.

10.

Beate Hartinger-Klein successfully ran for a seat in the Styrian regional diet in 1995, serving from January 1996 to October 1999, and for a seat on the National Council in 1999, serving from October of that year to December 2002.

11.

Disillusioned with Jorg Haider after the Knittelfeld putsch in September 2002, Beate Hartinger-Klein left the party, and politics in general.

12.

Beate Hartinger-Klein declined to stand for the November 2002 National Council elections.

13.

Beate Hartinger-Klein later rejoined the Freedom Party, but not until 2013.

14.

Beate Hartinger-Klein demanded and eventually won the People's Party support in overturning the law.

15.

Beate Hartinger-Klein initially stated that she was "not happy" about the development but would grudgingly support it out of respect for democracy.

16.

Beate Hartinger-Klein later amended her position and declared herself opposed to smoking bans as a matter of principle.

17.

Opposition politicians such as Josef Muchitsch, an employees' representative and member of parliament for the Social Democratic Party, have accused Beate Hartinger-Klein of being biased against the AUVA.

18.

In 2015, Beate Hartinger-Klein had applied for the position of director general of the AUVA but had lost out to another candidate.

19.

Beate Hartinger-Klein alleged gender discrimination and complained to the relevant equal opportunities committee.

20.

On her official ministry web page and in her official CV, Beate Hartinger-Klein professes to be a member of the Austrian Evangelical Church, a mainstream but minority congregation in Catholic-dominated Austria.

21.

Beate Hartinger-Klein's husband, Andreas Klein, is an Evangelical theologist, ethicist, lecturer with the University of Vienna, and ethics consultant.