Alfred De Taeye Explained

Term Start:17 February 1946
Term End:11 April 1958
Office2:Minister of Health and Families
Term Start2:8 June 1950
Term End2:23 April 1954
Birth Date:21 June 1905
Birth Place:Kaprijke, East Flanders, Belgium
Death Place:Leuven, Brabant, Belgium
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Alfred Aloïs De Taeye (1905–1958) was a Belgian Christian Democrat trade unionist and politician.

Career

De Taeye was active in the Confederation of Christian Trade Unions in Kortrijk and sat on the city council from 1938 to 1942.[1] From 1948 to 1950 he was mayor of Kortrijk. In the 1946 Belgian general election he was elected to the Chamber of Representatives for the Constituency of Kortrijk, remaining in parliament until his death on 11 April 1958.[1] From 1950 to 1954 he served as minister of health and families in the governments headed by Jean Duvieusart, Joseph Pholien, and Jean Van Houtte.[1]

As a parliamentarian he played a key role in post-war housing policy, drafting a law that funded 50,000 social homes and subsidised the building of small family homes (1948), and another that encouraged slum clearance (1953). The first of these laws has been seen as causing a proliferation of ribbon development in postwar Belgium, while the second encouraged insufficiently planned urban redevelopment.[2]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alfred De Taeye . ODIS . 23 July 2018.
  2. Hoe één CVP-politicus verantwoordelijk is voor de wildgroei van lintbebouwing in Vlaanderen. 31 December 2019 . Knack. Ewald Pironet . Ann Peuteman . Walter Pauli . nl.