Pilar Llop Explained

Pilar Llop
Honorific Prefix:The Most Excellent
Office:Minister of Justice
First Notary of the Kingdom
Primeminister:Pedro Sánchez
Term Start:12 July 2021
Term End:21 November 2023
Predecessor:Juan Carlos Campo
Successor:Félix Bolaños
Office1:61st President of the Senate
Monarch1:Felipe VI
Predecessor1:Manuel Cruz Rodríguez
Vicepresident1:Cristina Narbona
Pío García-Escudero
Successor1:Ander Gil
Term Start1:3 December 2019
Term End1:8 July 2021
Office2:Member of the Senate
Constituency2:Assembly of Madrid
Term Start2:11 July 2019
Term End2:8 July 2021
Office3:Government Delegate for Gender Violence
Term Start3:24 July 2018
Term End3:13 April 2019
Predecessor3:María José Ordóñez
Successor3:Rebeca Palomo
Office4:Member of the Assembly of Madrid
Term Start4:11 June 2019
Term End4:12 July 2021
Term Start5:9 June 2015
Term End5:13 July 2018
Birth Date:3 August 1973
Birth Place:Madrid, Spain
Occupation:Judge, politician, consultant
Citizenship:Spanish

María Pilar Llop Cuenca (born 3 August 1973) is a Spanish judge and politician who served as the minister of Justice of Spain and ex officio First Notary of the Kingdom from 2021 to 2023. Previously, she served as the 61st president of the Senate of Spain. She has been Spanish Senator designated by the Assembly of Madrid, an assembly of which she has been part since June 2019. Previously, she was member of the Assembly of Madrid from 2015 to 2018 and Government Delegate for Gender Violence of the Government of Spain from 2018 to 2019.

Early life and education

Born on 3 August 1973 in Madrid to a humble family; her father was a taxi-driver and her mother a hairdresser.[1] [2] [3] She graduated with a degree in law at the Complutense University of Madrid.[4] She also obtained a master's degree in judicial translation in the University of Alicante.

Career

Llop entered the judiciary in 1999 and became a magistrate in 2004.[5]

Llop ran in the Spanish Socialist Worker's Party (PSOE) list for the 2015 Madrilenian regional election led by Ángel Gabilondo and became a member of the 10th term of the regional legislature. She formalised the renouncement of her seat in the Assembly of Madrid on 13 July 2018,[6] as she had been appointed by the Council of Ministers presided over by Pedro Sánchez as the new Government Delegate for Gender Violence. She was sworn into office on 24 July 2018.[7]

During her time in office, Llop led efforts on reforming Spain’s insolvency law to simplify bankruptcy proceedings and meet a major condition agreed with the European Commission to obtain European Union recovery funds.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vanity Fair. Así es Pilar Llop, la próxima presidenta del Senado: jueza políglota, feminista y madre de una hija. Nuria. Hernández. 2 December 2019.
  2. El País. En una sociedad democrática no cabe la prostitución. 27 December 2018. Pilar. Álvarez.
  3. Pilar Llop: "Estoy en política para que la igualdad entre hombres y mujeres sea una realidad". 6 July 2015. Confilegal.
  4. El País. Pilar. Álvarez. Pilar Llop, nueva delegada del Gobierno para la Violencia de Género. 13 July 2018.
  5. Web site: La delegada del Gobierno en violencia machista explicará en el Congreso cómo identificar las conductas de acoso. Europa Press. 12 November 2018.
  6. Web site: Altas y bajas de diputados en la X legislatura. 4 February 2019. Assembly of Madrid. https://web.archive.org/web/20190204174450/https://www.asambleamadrid.es/Documents/Transparencia/XLEGISLATURAdiputadosaltasbajas.pdf. 4 February 2019. dead.
  7. Martes, 24 de julio de 2018 (7.00 GMT). El Confidencial. 24 July 2018.
  8. Belén Carreño (21 December 2021), Spain streamlines bankruptcy process to get EU recovery funds Reuters.