Puiu Hașotti | |
Office: | Member of the Chamber of Deputies |
Term Start: | 22 Nov 1996 – 10 Dec 2000 11 Dec 2000 |
Term End: | 11 Dec 2004 |
Constituency: | no. 14 (Constanța) |
Office2: | Senator of Romania |
Term Start2: | 13 Dec 2004 – 12 Dec 2008 15 Dec 2008 |
Constituency2: | no. 14 (Constanța) |
Office3: | Leader of the National Liberal Party group in the Senate |
Term Start3: | 4 April 2007 |
Constituency3: | no. 14 (Constanța) |
Office4: | Minister of Culture |
Term Start4: | 25 June 2012 |
Term End4: | 21 December 2012 |
President4: | Traian Basescu |
Primeminister4: | Victor Ponta |
Predecessor4: | Mircea Diaconu |
Successor4: | Daniel Barbu |
Birth Date: | 14 June 1953 |
Party: | National Liberal Party |
Puiu Hașotti (pronounced as /ro/; born 14 June 1953) is a social conservative[1] Romanian politician of Aromanian descent. He is a vice-president of the National Liberal Party (PNL) and the leader of the party's group in the Senate.
In April 2013, Hașotti incited controversy by declaring that he considers gay people to be "sick people". He also said that, "Homosexuality is not a normal state, it is not a natural relationship". The comments were made in the context of political debate about same-sex civil unions in Romania. Accept, Romania's national LGBT rights organisation, stated that they believed Hașotti's comments were a breach of anti-discrimination law and would report him to the National Council for Combating Discrimination.[2]
Puiu Hașotti was born on 14 June 1953 in Constanța, Romania.[3] He is an Aromanian.[4] [5] Hașotti graduated from the Faculty of History, University of Bucharest in 1976 and received his doctorate in historical sciences in 1995. The year before he was a Fulbright Fellow at San Francisco State University. Before entering politics, Hașotti worked as a curator, principal curator, and then senior researcher (between 1976–1996). He also was a counsellor at Constanța County Inspectorate for Culture (1990–1995), and a lecturer at the University Ovidius Constanța, Faculty of History (1990–1996). He later gained an associate professorship at this institution, which he still holds.