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Political Memory: Heide RÜHLE, MEP

{{#icon:HeideRuhle.jpg|Heide RÜHLE}}

General Data

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Contact
{{#icon:Click_to_call_now.png|+32 2 28 45 609||callto://+3222845609}}


Functions in European Parliament

Curriculum Vitae

  • Studied psychology at Tübingen
  • Chairwoman of the Greens in Baden-Württemberg (1987-1990)
  • Speaker (chairwoman) of the Federal Executive (1990-1991)
  • Political affairs officer in the Federal Executive of the Greens and of Bündnis 90/Die Grünen (1991-1998)
  • Member of the Commercial, Banking and Insurance Workers' Union (HBV)
  • Vice-chairwoman and treasurer of the Greens/European Free Alliance Group
  • Member of the German Association for Nature and Environmental Protection (BUND) Member of the members' assembly and former member of the board of the Heinrich Böll Foundation
  • Member of the European Parliament (since 1999)

Votes


Opinions

Sources

Positions

Thanks to improve this part with opinions from Heide RÜHLE about La Quadrature du Net concerned issues (see page Help:Political_Memory to know how to do it).

25/05/2010 Written Declaration 12/2010 (ACTA)

Has signed written declaration 12/2010 on the lack of a transparent process for the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) and potentially objectionable content.

08/07/2008 Press Release after IMCO vote on Telecoms Package

Telecoms - universal services directive: A vote for consumer protection, not internet policing

German MEP Heide Rühle welcomed yesterday's adoption of the telecom universal services report by the European Parliament Internal Market and Consumer Protection Committee.

"This report brings multiple benefits to consumers: clearer, transparent, comparable and up-to-date information on prices, tariffs and contract conditions. Consumers will also be better informed on payment methods, service quality, maintenance, contacting customer support and the "112" emergency number. All users will be able to call emergency services and access caller location information free of charge. The use of telecommunications by disabled users will also be improved.

A Greens/EFA amendment also favours competition and prevents subscribers getting tied into excessively long contracts: maximum contract length is set at 24 months and a maximum 12 month option must always be provided.

We welcome the approval of this report in the face of a misleading campaign that suggested that it would allow internet service providers to monitor or block users' access to the internet by controlling the content of users' internet activities. The Telecom Universal Service Directive does not provide for "internet policing" by internet providers. While the proposal allows national regulators to take measures against service degradation and slowing of traffic over networks, it explicitly states that users must not have their online access unreasonably restricted. We believe internet access is a service of general interest and a minimum quality of service must be guaranteed to all users.

Unfortunately the internal market committee (IMCO) could not address the ill-conceived civil liberties committee (LIBE) vote in June that supported allowing any natural or legal person to process traffic data. This provision, as well as the LIBE and IMCO Reports will go to the Parliament's Plenary Session in September. In light of this the Greens remain open to any proposals to further improve the Directive."