![]() The government has 108 mandates in the 200-seat Chamber of Deputies and can obtain a majority. After 22 hours, the session was adjourned on Thursday morning and resumed in the evening. However, the success was diluted by several issues surrounding one of the coalition parties.Ī debate ahead of a vote of confidence in the five-party coalition government carried on all through Wednesday night. Since his childhood, Jan Farský has been an active member of the Scout movement and in 2013 was elected the head of the Scout group in Semily.The new cabinet of Prime Minister Petr Fiala (ODS) on Thursday evening finally got the green light from the lower house of parliament, a step needed in the Czech political system. Jan Farský was awarded Personality of the Year 2014 in selection made by Eric Best´s Final Word for Jan Farský´s anti-corruption efforts.This list was co-created by The Financial Times, he International Visegrad Fund, Google and a Polish magazine Res Publica. He was selected among 14 other Czech personalities (Vladimir Koren – mayor of Říčany, Karel Janeček – mathematician and entrepreneur, Jiří Mádl – actor and director). In October 2014 he was voted one of the hundred best innovators of Central and Eastern Europe.One of the aims of this Forum is organizing lectures and seminars on various social and political issues. Shortly after the establishment of the Forum Karel Schwarzenberg in September 2013 he became a member of its board of directors.In February 2013 Jan Farský became board member of the international non-profit organization Aspen Institute Prague, which started its activities in the Czech Republic in July 2012.Topics often vary (architecture, cultural heritage, transparency, innovation in municipal management) but the platform has already found its audience. ![]() In 2014 Jan Farský founded Mayors to mayors platform where it is possible for municipal politicians from the whole political spectre to share their knowledge and experiences with others who are most likely to encounter the same obstacles and problems. The bill was finally accepted on 24 November 2015. The contracts concluded by public institutions should be available on the Internet. The aim was to make every public expenditure easily accessible to public, with the exception of reasoned cases, similar to the policy being used in Slovakia since 2011. In June 2012 Jan Farský presented a draft law on the contracts registry. Jan Farský´s main topics are transparency in public sector and its expenditures, anti-corruption legislation, public contracts and their procurement rules, open data. He was one of seven members elected for the Czech Republic to the Permanent Delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of NATO since 2010. From December 2013 he held the position of Deputy Vice-Chairman of Constitutional Law Committee. He received nearly 16% of preference votes cast for his political party. In the elections to the Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Czech Republic in 2013, Jan Farský stood as a leader of TOP 09 and STAN in the Liberec Region. Jan Farsky received 3,425 preferential votes which ensured him a seat in the Parliament. In the elections of 2010 Jan Farský became a member of the Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Czech Republic, even though he was on the last place of the ballot. Before the elections he announced no desire to remain at the position of mayor. In the municipal elections in 2014, Jan Farsky became the city councilor. In the municipal elections of 2010, Choice for Semily made the best election results in the history of Semily. Since 2008 to 2009 he held a position of a chairman of the movement which he left in 2009 to be a vice-chairman. Jan Farsky was elected to be a member of the Liberec Region Council in 2008. In 2008 he co-founded a political movement Mayors for Liberec Region. Jan Farsky Choice for Semily won the municipal elections in 2006. After graduation he worked as a municipal lawyer in Semily, in a private law firm, as an advisor to Martin Jahn (Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Policy) and in Škoda Auto, as an advisor in the department for relations with public institutions. He attended high school in Semily and in 2002 graduated the Faculty of Law at the Masaryk University in Brno. Jan Farský grew up with two older brothers in the outskirts of Semily called Nouzov.
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