Career
She was appointed to the role of Alternate Minister of Finance in the cabinet of Alexis Tsipras on 27 January 2015. She resigned from this role on 15 July 2015, before a significant vote on the terms of a bailout package in the Hellenic Parliament. Valavani was a student in Iraklio during the Greek military junta, and engaged in anti-regime activities under the auspices of the then-outlawed Communist Youth of Greece (KNE) and Communist Party of Greece (Kommunistiko Komma Elladas (Communist Party of Greece)), for which she was imprisoned in various facilities, including a five-month stretch in solitary confinement.
In July 1974 after the end of the dictatorship, she was released from Korydallos Prison, whereupon she returned to her studies.
Valavani is a graduate of the Athens University of Economics and Business. Valavani worked as a translator in an insurance company for 20 years, and from 1996 to 2005 was the director of a hotel in Crete.
She left the Kommunistiko Komma Elladas (Communist Party of Greece) in 1989, disagreeing with its decision to serve in the unity government of Tzannis Tzannetakis. In 2007 she was invited to join the Syriza, and helped organize its activities in Crete.
In 2009, she contested Athens B for Syriza and lost in a difficult election, afterwards devoting herself to campaigning for Syriza, working as a canvasser, author of pamphlets, and organizing rallies while engaging in dialogue with other leftist groups and writing opinion pieces for various left and centre-left newspapers.
Valavani was first elected to the Hellenic Parliament representing Athens B for Syriza in May 2012. She was re-elected in June 2012 and again in the January 2015 election. Following the election of a Syriza-ANEL coalition on 25 January 2015, Valavani was appointed to the role of Alternate Minister of Finance within the Cabinet of Alexis Tsipras on 27 January.
She is one of two Alternate Ministers in the Ministry of Finance (Greece), the other being Dimitris Mardas.
She was responsible for taxation and overseeing privatisation. On 15 July 2015, Valavani resigned from her role as Alternate Minister of Finance in the Greek government, shortly before an important vote on a bailout package.
In her resignation letter to Alexis Tsipras, she wrote that the "agreement is a tombstone" and that it was a "humiliation of government and country". Her mother withdrew €200,000 from the National Bank of Greece before the imposition of capital controls.