Ariane de Lobkowicz-d'Ursel
Member of the Brussels Parliament
for the French Community Commission
Assumed office
2019
Personal details
Born (1996-01-30) 30 January 1996
Uccle, Belgium
Political partyDéFI
Parent(s)Stéphane de Lobkowicz and Barbara d'Ursel de Lobkowicz

Ariane Thérèse Nathalie Colienne Ludovic Marie Princess de Lobkowicz-d'Ursel (born 30 January 1996) is a Belgian politician who was elected to the Brussels Parliament.[1]

Biography

A member of the Lobkowicz noble family, she is the daughter of Stéphane de Lobkowicz and Barbara d'Ursel de Lobkowicz, both members of the Brussels Parliament.[2][3] After being graduated in computer graphics from the ESA Saint-Luc in Brussels, she continued her education at the Haute École Albert Jacquard in Namur. She is currently studying law in evening classes at the University Saint-Louis Bruxelles, which she started after her election to the Brussels Parliament. Ariane officially bears, by royal decree, the title of Princess in Belgium.

In 2019, she was the youngest deputy elected to the Brussels Parliament. In her campaign she indicated that, like her mother, she also wanted to be committed to animal welfare.[4]

Political Functions

  • Member of Parliament of the Brussels-Capital Region as of June 2019.
  • Author or co-author of the proposal amending the law of August 14, 1986 on the protection and welfare of animals.(prohibition of ritual slaughter), of the proposal amending the same law to set conditions for the marketing of foie gras, of the proposal to prohibit the keeping of cetaceans.
  • Author of the "Letter to Holy Holiness Pope Francis about our cousins, the animals".

References

  1. "Dit zijn de 72 Franstalige gekozenen in Brussel". bruzz.be. Bruzz. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
  2. "Brussels parlementslid Barbara d'Ursel de Lobkowicz overleden". bruzz.be. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
  3. État présent de la noblesse belge (2009), page 225
  4. "Elections 2019 : Leila Agic (24 ans) et Ariane de Lobkowicz d'Ursel (23 ans) font leur entrée au Parlement bruxellois". 27 May 2019. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.