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Henri Simonet

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President
  
Francois-Xavier Ortoli

Party
  
Parti Socialiste

Role
  
Belgian Politician


Name
  
Henri Simonet

Political party
  
Socialist Party

Children
  
Jacques Simonet

Henri Simonet wwwparlementcom93530001j4nvh0qavhjkdqdj9vvj1

Preceded by
  
Position established Wilhelm Haferkamp (Internal Market and Energy)

Succeeded by
  
Richard Burke (Taxation, Consumer Affairs and Transport) Guido Brunner (Energy, the Science and Research)

Born
  
10 May 1931 Brussels, Belgium (
1931-05-10
)

Died
  
February 15, 1996, Brussels, Belgium

Books
  
NATO, the Next Thirty Years: Report of the Conference, Palais D'Egmont, Brussels, Belgium, September 1-3, 1979

SYND 8 11 77 BELGIAN FOREIGN MINSTER SIMONET MEETS PRESIDENT ASSAD IN DAMASCUS


Henri François Simonet (10 May 1931 – 15 February 1996) was a Belgian politician.

Born in Brussels, Henri Simonet studied law and economics at the ULB and then went to Columbia University as CRB Graduate Fellow. Simonet began his political life as a member of the Socialist Party (PS). He served as mayor of Anderlecht between 1966 and 1984, succeeding the long-serving Joseph Bracops. Like Bracops, Simonet dominated the local political scene to such an extent that the ambitious Philippe Moureaux moved to neighbouring Molenbeek-Saint-Jean to pursue a career there. In 1985 Simonet left the Socialists to join the Liberal Reformist Party (PRL) where he espoused increasingly atlanticist positions.

As mayor of Anderlecht, Simonet presided over considerable changes to what had been a largely industrial and working class community, attracting new development in the form of the Erasmus Hospital, a teaching hospital tied to the ULB on whose administrative council Simonet served.

Christian D'Hoogh succeeded Simonet as mayor of Anderlecht.

Simonet served as Vice-Chairman of the European Commission from 1973 to 1977 and as Minister for Regional Economic Development in 1978 and 1979. On the national plan, Simonet served as Minister of Foreign Affairs and before as Minister of Economics Affairs.

His son Jacques Simonet, who made his political career in the liberal Liberal Reformist Party, served twice as Minister-President of the Brussels-Capital Region (1999-2000; 2004) and as mayor of Anderlecht from 2000 until his death in 2007. They are buried together in the cemetery of Anderlecht

References

Henri Simonet Wikipedia