María de los Llanos de Luna

María de los Llanos de Luna
Delegate of the Spanish Government in Catalonia
In office
30 December 2011  21 November 2016
Monarch Juan Carlos I
Felipe VI
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy
Preceded by Montserrat García Llovera
Succeeded by Enric Millo
Member of the Parliament of Catalonia for the Province of Barcelona
In office
16 December 2010  3 January 2012
Personal details
Born María de los Llanos de Luna Tobarra
(1960-03-03) 3 March 1960
Sevilla, Spain
Political party People's Party of Catalonia (PP)
Alma mater University of Murcia
Occupation Civil servant, lawyer and politician

María de los Llanos de Luna Tobarra (born 3 March 1960), is a Spanish politician and lawyer, who has been Delegate of the Spanish Government in Catalonia between 2011 and 2016.

Biography

Born in Sevilla on 3 March 1960, Llanos de Luna received a degree in Law from the University of Murcia, with a postgraduate degree in the School of Legal Practice of the same institution and a master's degree in Public Administration for INAP[1].

She held various positions as public speaker (1987-1993) and deputy director (1996-2003) of the National Institute of Social Security of Barcelona, president of the Commission for the Assessment of Labor Disabilities in Barcelona, and adviser of the General Treasury of the Social Security of Barcelona[2].

To the political plan, she was subdelegated from the Spanish Government in Barcelona (2003-2004), a Member of the Parliament of Catalonia, where she always used Spanish in his interventions,[3] and the attached spokeswoman for the PPC parliamentary group since 2010 [4]; member of the Executive Committee and the Board of Directors of the Partido Popular de Catalunya; President of the Commission for Labor and Social Security Studies of the PPC, and Deputy Secretary of the Sector of the Popular Party of Barcelona.

Delegate of the Government to Catalonia

With the victory of Rajoy in the 2011 elections, she was appointed Delegate of the Government in Catalonia until 2016, when was succeeded by Enric Millo.[5] [6] [7] During his mandate she had to face with the first independentist political actions, beginning by denouncing the municipalities that declare "free territories".[8] [9] On 27 March 2013 was declared persona non grata by Girona City Hall.[10]

References

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