Vincent Chauvet

[2] He worked as a reporter to the editorial board of La Tribune in Paris and Reuters in Brussels and hosted political talk shows on the Christian radio Fréquence protestante.

[3] After working in Brussels as a political communication advisor, Vincent Chauvet was recruited in 2013 by New York University School of Law to run the joint EU Regulatory Policy Legal Clinic with HEC Paris[4] and to help launch the first Massive open online course of a French business school,[5] focusing on European affairs and citizens' empowerment.

In 2010, he sued Prime Minister François Fillon for failing to enact anonymous CV legislation and brought the case before the Constitutional Council under the newly established ex post judicial review,[6] arguing that the doctrine of standing in French administrative law was unconstitutional and pleading in favour of the introduction of public-interest litigation.

[17] As youth branch leader of the Union for French Democracy Vincent Chauvet stood on the centrist ballot for the 2010 regional election in Burgundy.

He seats in the Renew Europe in the European Committee of the Regions and has been elected as Vice-President of the French Delegation and coordinator of the Environment Commission.