Yann Wehrling

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Yann Wehrling
Yann Wehrling in 2010
Councillor of Paris
Assumed office
30 March 2014
MayorAnne Hidalgo
Member of the Regional council of Île-de-France
Assumed office
13 December 2015
PresidentValérie Pécresse
National Secretary of The Greens
In office
25 January 2005 – 16 November 2006
Preceded byGilles Lemaire
Succeeded byCécile Duflot
General Secretary of MoDem
In office
18 September 2017 – 12 December 2018
Preceded byMarc Fesneau
Succeeded byJean-Noël Barrot
Personal details
Born (1971-07-03) 3 July 1971 (age 52)
Strasbourg, France
Political partyThe Greens
MoDem
Alma materUniversity of Strasbourg
Gay Pride, Paris in France
, June 2005

Yann Wehrling (born 3 July 1971) is a French illustrator and politician of the Democratic Movement (MoDem). He previously was a member and former leader of the political party The Greens.

Education and early activism

In 1988 Wehrling joined the

TnaG
.

Wehrling is a specialist in wild

fauna, and an expert on the reintroduction of the lynx into the Vosges
forest.

Political career

Green Party

Wehrling then became a spokesman for The Greens. In January 2005 he was elected the National Secretary of The Greens with 62% of the vote, coming after long and protracted negotiations. In December 2006 Cécile Duflot succeeded him to the post.

Wehrling belonged to the environmentalist wing of the party, named "Pôle Écolo" (the Eco-Pole) ou "Ecolo" (Eco). He worked with fellow Green politicians in the European Parliament.

MoDem

Following the 2008 French municipal elections in Strasbourg, Wehrling became a member of François Bayrou's Democratic Movement (MoDem). As a consequence, he was excluded from the Green Party.[1]

Ahead of the 2014 Paris municipal election, Wehrling joined the campaign team of candidate Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet.[2]

In 2017, Wehrling succeeded Marc Fesneau as secretary general of MoDem, under the leadership of chairman François Bayrou.[3]

In 2018, Wehrling was appointed by Minister of Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Yves Le Drian as France's ambassador on the environment.[4]

Media action

On 22 March 2005, for the

French rivers and to urge the government to reexamine its environmental policy in this regard. French President Jacques Chirac had—in a sense—promised much the same thing in regard to the Seine river during time as mayor of Paris
.

References

External links