Martine_Daugreilh

Martine Daugreilh

Martine Daugreilh

French politician and essayist


Martine Daugreilh (née Gasquet; 11 September 1947) is a French politician and essayist. She was Member of Parliament for Alpes-Maritimes's 2nd constituency from 1988 to 1933 and was the first woman elected MP in Nice. Most recently she was responsible for the Mediterranean University Centre.

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Biography

Daugreilh is a professor of history and geography by training, and was close to the former mayor of Nice Jacques Médecin.[1]

In the 1988 French legislative election she was elected to the National Assembly in Alpes-Maritimes's 2nd constituency under the label Rally for the Republic (RPR) with 63.61% of the votes in the second round against the socialist candidate Patrick Mottard (36.39 %).[2] In October 1988, she tabled with forty-two of her colleagues a bill aimed at restoring the death penalty for certain crimes.

During the 1992 regional elections, she decided to run on a different list from that of her party, but failed to be elected. Its various right list entitled "Sauvons Nice" and bringing together socio-professionals, only collected 1.68% of the votes in the Alpes-Maritimes and 3% in Nice. In the 1993 French legislative election she did not stand for re-election in her constituency, thus leaving the field open to Christian Estrosi, designated by L'Express as being her “intimate enemy”.[3]

She was secretary general of the Nice circle of the Club de l'horloge.

At the end of the 2000s and until 2012, she directed the Mediterranean University Center in Nice, a place of cultural and intellectual exchange founded in 1933 by Jean Médecin, of whom Paul Valéry was a director. She holds the position of deputy director general of cultural development for the town hall of Nice.

In 2012, she was made a Knight of Arts et Lettres.[4]

Personal life

She was the wife of Jean-Pierre Daugreilh,[5] one of the members of the Groupement de recherche et d'études pour la civilisation européenne,[6] which had deposited its statutes in 1969, who later became regional councillor for the Front national in Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur.[7]


References

  1. Garrigou, Alain (1992). "Le boss, la machine et le scandale. La chute de la maison Médecin". Politix. Revue des sciences sociales du politique. 5 (17). Persée: 7–35. doi:10.3406/polix.1992.1487. Retrieved 31 May 2023..
  2. "Le second tour des élections législatives". Le Monde: 18. 14 June 1988. Retrieved 29 April 2021..
  3. Jean-Yves Camus et René Monzat (1992). Les Droites nationales et radicales en France (in French). Lyon: Presses universitaires de Lyon. p. 267. ISBN 2-7297-0416-7..
  4. "Jean-Pierre Daugreilh". lesbiographies.com..

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