Gaëtan Gorce

Gaëtan Gorce (born December 2, 1958, in Luzy, Nièvre) is a member of the National Assembly of France. He represents the Nièvre department,[1] and is a member of the Socialiste, radical, citoyen et divers gauche.

Gaëtan Gorce
Gaëtan Gorce
Member of the French Senate for Nièvre
In office
2011–2017
Member of the National Assembly
for Nièvre's 2nd constituency
In office
1997–2011
Preceded byRené-Pierre Signé
Succeeded byChristian Paul
Personal details
Born (1958-12-02) 2 December 1958
Luzy, France
Political partySocialist Party
Alma materSciences Po, ÉNA

Education

Gorce earned a law degree in 1979, then graduated from Sciences Po in 1981 and from ENA in 1987 alongside future National Assembly colleague Christian Paul.

Professional career

As the administrator of Paris, then as sub-prefect and civil administrator, Gorce collaborated with Maurice Benassayag, interministerial delegate of Rapatriés (1988-1989), Pierre Joxe at the Ministry of the Interior (1989-1991), Edith Cresson in Matignon (1991-1992), and with François Mitterrand as the president of the Republic (1992-1995).

Political career

Gorce is a member of the Socialist Party, which he joined in 1974. He led the New Voice movement and initiated the Renovators movement within the Socialist Party, notably alongside Manuel Valls, Patrick Bloche, Christophe Caresche, and Jean-Patrick Gille.

Though he lost the municipal elections of 1995 in Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire, he nevertheless served as municipal counselor of the city until 2001. He was elected mayor of La Charité-sur-Loire in March 2001, and later re-elected in March 2008. As mayor, he launched a program to rehabilitate the city's historic center, founded the Festival du Mot with Marc Lecarpentier, and earned La Charité-sur-Loire the "city of art and history" label. He chose not to run for mayor in 2014 but remained a municipal councilor in the majority list until December 2017, when he left the post.

Gorce was elected as a delegate to the second constituency of Nièvre in June 1997, then re-elected in June 2002 and June 2007. He was a member of the Social Affairs Committee, then of the National Assembly's Finance Committee as a special rapporteur on the employment budget, and finally of Foreign Affairs. As National employment secretary of the Socialist Party (1999-2005), he was rapporteur for the 35-hour week law. During he second term, he and Jean Leonetti co-chaired the information mission on end-of-life support, which led to the unanimous adoption of the Law on the rights of patients and the end of life by the National Assembly. For this action, Gorce received the Trombinoscope prize of "Delegate of the Year" in 2004.[2]

Supporting Ségolène Royal during the 2007 presidential campaign, in June he resigned from the national bodies of the PS and called for the resignation of Prime Secretary François Hollande, whom he held responsible for the defeat.[3]

Still supporting Ségolène Royal at the 2008 Reims Congress, he returned briefly to the leadership of the Socialist Party (as national secretary of the PS responsible for exclusion), before leaving it definitively a few months later.

In 2009, he opposed the bill aimed at liberalizing internet gambling, judging the opening of this market to be inappropriate, in particular for reasons of public health.

In September 2009, he rejoined the Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Assembly, while remaining vice-president of human rights organization Socialist Related. As a member of these organizations, he published a report on the situation in Burma with the delegate Roland Blum. He also campaigned to obtain information about the disappearance of Chadian politician and opposition leader Ibni Oumar Mahamat Saleh.

Gorce was elected senator of Nièvre in September 2011 with 56.35% of the vote.

In 2011, denouncing the lack of preparation of the Socialist Party program, he decided not to join the campaign team of candidate François Hollande.[4]

In 2014, he chaired the joint information mission "New role and new strategy for the European Union in global Internet governance".[5]

In 2015, he was co-rapporteur of the fact-finding mission “Relations with Russia: how to break the deadlock?".[6]

In 2016, he co-chaired the working group on the refugee crisis.[7]

He was a member of Arnaud Montebourg's campaign team for the 2017 citizen primary.[8] After the victory of Benoît Hamon, Gorce was appointed thematic manager of his presidential campaign.[9]

Gorce was a candidate in the 2017 legislative elections in the first constituency of Nièvre, ultimately finishing third. After the loss, he announced his withdrawal from municipal and parliamentary life, and decided not to enter in the senatorial elections of the same year. In October 2018, he left the PS and joined the Republican and Socialist Left Party, created by Marie-Noëlle Lienemann and Emmanuel Maurel,[10] where he led "Our Common Causes."

Member of Cnil

Between 2011 and 2016, Gorce was a member of the National Commission for Information and Liberties (Cnil). He received compensation for this even though article 4 of ordinance n° 58-1210 prohibits such action.[11] As a member of Cnil, he was behind a bill to ban "comfort biometrics" and a parliamentary report concerning open data from the perspective of personal data protection and the right to privacy.

References

  1. "LISTE DÉFINITIVE DES DÉPUTÉS ÉLUS À L'ISSUE DES DEUX TOURS" (in French). National Assembly of France. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  2. "Au nom de leur père". Le Monde.fr (in French). 11 April 2005. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
  3. "Gaëtan Gorce quittela direction du PS". L'Obs (in French). 21 June 2007. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
  4. "Accord PS-Verts: Gorce s'emporte contre la direction socialiste". LExpress.fr. 24 November 2011. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
  5. "Nouveau rôle et nouvelle stratégie pour l'Union européenne dans la gouvernance mondiale de l'Internet - Sénat". www.senat.fr. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
  6. "Les relations avec la Russie : comment sortir de l'impasse ?". www.senat.fr. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
  7. "Groupe de travail sur la crise des réfugiés : Dossier de contrôle". www.senat.fr. Retrieved 2016-05-02.
  8. « L'organigramme de l'équipe de campagne d'Arnaud Montebourg dévoilé » Archived 2017-01-08 at the Wayback Machine, liberation.fr, 2 janvier 2016.
  9. Marie-Pierre Haddad , « Présidentielle 2017 : ce que traduit le nouvel organigramme de l'équipe de Hamon », rtl.fr, 26 février 2017.
  10. Sylvia Zappi (19 October 2018). "Emmanuel Maurel et Marie-Noëlle Lienemann lancent Après, avec 650 élus, cadres et militants socialistes". Le Monde..
  11. Laurent Mauduit (12 July 2017). "Indemnités: de nombreux parlementaires sont dans l'illégalité". Mediapart. Retrieved 27 July 2017..
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