Helena Roseta

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ConstituencyLisbon
ConstituencyPorto (1987–1995)
Lisbon (1995–2002)
Coimbra (2002–2005)
ConstituencyLisbon (1975–1980)
Setúbal (1980–1982)
Preceded bySimoneta Luz Afonso
Helena Roseta
Roseta in 2025
Member of the Assembly of the Republic
In office
25 October 2015  24 October 2019
ConstituencyLisbon
In office
19 July 1987  20 February 2005
ConstituencyPorto (1987–1995)
Lisbon (1995–2002)
Coimbra (2002–2005)
In office
2 June 1975  20 June 1982
ConstituencyLisbon (1975–1980)
Setúbal (1980–1982)
President of the Lisbon Municipal Assembly
In office
24 October 2013  31 October 2019
Preceded bySimoneta Luz Afonso
Succeeded byJosé Leitão
Member of the Lisbon City Council
In office
1 August 2007  29 September 2013
In office
12 December 1976  16 December 1979
Mayor of Cascais
In office
12 December 1982  15 December 1985
Preceded byCarlos Rosa
Succeeded byGeorges Dargent
Personal details
BornMaria Helena do Rego da Costa Salema
(1947-12-23) 23 December 1947 (age 78)
PartyIndependent (2007–present)
Other political
affiliations
Social Democratic Party (1974–1986)
Independent (1986–1991)
Socialist Party (1991–2007)
SpousePedro Roseta [pt]
Children3, including Filipa Roseta
RelativesCuca Roseta (niece)
Alma materUniversity of Lisbon

Maria Helena do Rego da Costa Salema Roseta (born 23 December 1947) is a Portuguese architect, specialising in improvements to poorer neighbourhoods, and a politician who was a member of the Assembly of the Republic and President of the Lisbon Municipal Assembly and Mayor of Cascais.[1]

Maria Helena do Rego da Costa Salema Roseta was born in Lisbon on 23 December 1947. She grew up in a family of 7 siblings. A student with excellent grades, she studied at the Maria Amália Vaz de Carvalho secondary school and in 1964/65 was awarded a national prize given to the student with the best grades. After leaving school she went to the School of Fine Arts at the University of Lisbon, where she took a degree in architecture. In 1967, after floods that killed 500 people in the Lisbon region, she became involved with other students to support the flooded areas and publicize the facts, despite the censorship efforts of the authoritarian Estado Novo regime. Her future husband, Pedro Roseta, was another of the students involved. They have three daughters, one of them is Filipa Roseta.[2][3]

After graduating she worked with several architects, including Nuno Portas, Maurício de Vasconcelos  [pt], and Sebastião Formosinho Sanchez  [pt]. In 1973 she was elected Secretary-General of the National Union of Architects. In the same year she participated in the 3rd Congress of the Democratic Opposition, in Aveiro, where she spoke about housing problems. She was detained by the PIDE, the secret police of the Estado Novo, in the same year.[2]

Early political involvement

After the Carnation Revolution of April 25, 1974, which overthrew the Estado Novo, Roseta joined Portugal's Social Democratic Party (PSD). She was elected to the Constituent Assembly in 1975, and to the Assembly of the Republic in 1976. In the same year she was elected as a councillor for the Lisbon Municipality. In 1978, the PSD formed the Democratic Alliance with other centre-right parties and she was returned to the Assembly in 1979 and 1980 on the Democratic Alliance list. Between 1981 and 1982 she was President of the Parliamentary Commission for European Integration, which prepared Portugal's entry into the European Union, working closely with Simone Veil, the first elected President of the European Parliament. Roseta also ran the official PSD newspaper, Povo Livre (Free People). Between 1982 and 1985 she was the mayor of the municipality of Cascais and in this role she was also to face floods when Cascais was inundated in 1983, with loss of life. In 1986 she decided to support Mário Soares, the candidate of the Portuguese Socialist Party (PS) for President of the Republic. This led to her departure from the PSD and subsequent decision to join the PS.[2][3][4][5][6]

Other activities

Between 1991 and 1995 Roseta taught the subjects of Urbanism and Citizenship, and Urbanism and Municipalities at the Universidade Lusófona in Lisbon. Between 1995 and 1997 she served as an OECD expert on Urban Sustainability. In 1993, she took over the management of Botequim, a bar in Graça, Lisbon previously owned by the poet and social activist, Natália Correia, who died in that year. Later, she took responsibility for organizing the poet's intellectual estate. In 1998, she promoted the Yes for Tolerance movement during the national referendum on decriminalizing abortion. She chaired the National Council of the Order of Architects from 2001 to 2007. She was the founder of the National Association of Portuguese Municipalities. Since 2018, she has been a member of the Board of the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences of the NOVA University Lisbon and she also works with the same university as a collaborative researcher in the research group on "Cities, Environment and Regional Development".[2][3][5][6][7]

Later political life

Awards and honours

References

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