“It is a huge honor for me, but also a unique opportunity to further develop my career,” said Farský. He consulted the six-month internship with STAN Chairman Vít Rakušan and Prime Minister Petr Fiala (ODS). “I am glad that they both supported me in my further personal and professional growth,” he said.
As the chairman of the STAN parliamentary group, Farský also served in the previous election period. According to him, he takes his current resignation for granted. “In the event of a major vote that would require my personal presence, I will return at any time,” he added. He will send the salary to organizations such as People in Need, Memory of the Nation or Scout.
After this year’s elections, STAN strengthened to 33 deputies, previously it had only six. The mayors went to the polls in a coalition with the Pirates, who won four deputies instead of the current 22 deputies. The pirates set up their own parliamentary club.
The politician heads to Oregon State University
Farský, 42, graduated from the Faculty of Law of Masaryk University in Brno. He succeeded the commission in a project that addresses the possibility of transforming 250 years of American federalism into a plan for the next quarter century of the European Union. It will be implemented at Oregon State University.
The Fulbright Commission administers programs for students, researchers, lecturers, high school teachers, and nonprofits on both sides of the Atlantic. The Czech and American governments participate in the financing, but the program of assistants for teaching English is financed mainly by the Czech Ministry of Education. Since the program’s launch in 1991, approximately 2,100 Czech and American scholarship recipients have undergone the Fulbright program.
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