František Jiránek was born in Pilsen in year 1906. His father worked for the Railway Company. From 1920 to 1923, he was studying to become a locksmith and worked later on in a number of places in Pilsen as a locksmith. In the period 1934-1954 he was an employee of Pilsen Škodovka. Since 1920, he has been a member of the All-Party Association of Christian Workers. In 1922 he joined the ČSL, in this side belonged to his left.
After the February coup in 1948, he belonged to the faction of the then popular party loyal to the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, which took power in the party and transformed it into allies of the Communist regime.
After the elections in 1948 he was elected to the National Assembly for ČSL in the constituency of Pilsen. The mandate was acquired retrospectively in May 1954 as a substitute after the deputy Václav Bátek resigned. He remained in parliament for a short time until the end of his term of office, the 1954 elections. He was again elected as CSL in the 1960 elections (now as a member of the National Assembly of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic for the West Bohemian Region). He also obtained the mandate in the 1964 elections and remained in parliament until 1968. After the Federalisation of Czechoslovakia, he was seated in 1969 in the House of Commons of the Federal Assembly for the constituency of Blovice, where he remained until the end of the election period, the 1971 election.
From 1945-1954 he was Deputy Chairman of the MNV in Pilsen. In 1954 he was elected regional chairman of the Pilsen ČSL. After 1971, he was no longer involved in politics.
Sources
[1] Archives of Pilsen.
[3] wikipedia