Lojze Peterle
Lojze Peterle | |
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1st Prime Minister of Slovenia | |
In office 16 May 1990 – 14 May 1992 | |
President | Milan Kučan |
Deputy |
Jože Mencinger Andrej Ocvirk |
Preceded by | Dušan Šinigoj |
Succeeded by | Janez Drnovšek |
Personal details | |
Born |
Čužnja Vas, Yugoslavia (Now Slovenia) | 5 July 1948
Political party |
Christian Democrats (1989-2000) People’s Party (2000) New Slovenia (2000-present) |
Alma mater | University of Ljubljana |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Alojz "Lojze" Peterle (born 5 July 1948) is a Slovenian politician. He was the leader of the Slovene Christian Democrats from the founding of the party in 1990 until it merged with the Slovenian People's Party in 2000. Between 1990 and 1992, he was the president of the first freely elected Slovenian government. He is a Member of the European Parliament.[1]
Early life
Lojze Peterle was born to a peasant family in the Lower Carniolan village of Čužnja vas near Trebnje. He attended the Novo Mesto Grammar School. In 1967, he enrolled to the University of Ljubljana, where he studied history and geography, and later also economy. During his student years, he started collaborating with the Christian left intellectual circle around the journal Revija 2000.
In the 1980s, he started working at the Institute for Urban planning of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia. In the mid 1980s, he was involved in several projects of trans-regional cooperation within the Alpe-Adria regional cooperation network.
In 1990, he was elected president of the newly founded Slovene Christian Democrats.
Leader of the Christian Democrats (1990–2000)
Peterle became prime minister of Slovenia in May 1990 after parliamentary elections of April 1990 won by the DEMOS coalition (which included Christian Democrats and was created in the opposition to the Communist rule). In 1991, the DEMOS-led Slovene Parliament declared the country's independence from Yugoslavia, in compliance with the result of a referendum held in December the previous year. He served as prime minister until May 1992, when due to an internal crisis in the DEMOS coalition, a new coalition government under Janez Drnovšek was established by a constructive vote of no confidence. In the elections of 1992, the Christian Democrats gained some support and became the second largest party in a highly fragmented National Assembly, after the Liberal Democratic Party. The Christian Democrats entered a cross-party coalition with the Liberal Democrats and the United List of Social Democrats (former Communist Party of Slovenia) under the leadership of Janez Drnovšek. Peterle served as deputy prime minister and foreign minister from January 1993 until October 1994. Tensions were deep in the coalition, however, and Peterle resigned from his posts in 1994 when Drnovšek nominated Jožef Školč, a member of his own Liberal Democratic Party, to be speaker of Parliament, against the wishes of Peterle who believed that a Christian Democrat should be the speaker. The Christian Democrats did remain in the coalition, which was often divided over specific policy issues. In 1996, Peterle called for the dismissal of foreign minister Zoran Thaler because of his belief that Thaler did not do enough to help Slovenia's relations with Italy.
In 1996 elections, Peterle's party suffered a decisive defeat, losing popular support to the other two centre-right parties, the Social Democratic Party of Slovenia and the Slovene People's Party, that had remained in the opposition and had criticised what they called a "unprincipled coalition between Christian Democracy and former Communists".
Between 1996 and 2000, the Christian Democrats remained in opposition, and Peterle's leadership was frequently challenged by different fractions within the party. He nevertheless managed to remain the chairman of the Party until 2000, when the Christian Democrats merged with the Slovenian People's Party, which had until then supported Janez Drnovšek's third term as Prime Minister. As a consequence, Drnovšek's government fell in 2000, and Peterle became foreign minister again in the short-lived centre-right government of Andrej Bajuk from June 2000 to November 2000.
After the elections of 2000
Due to a disagreement over the election legislation, Peterle left the Slovene People's Party shortly after its unification with the Christian Democrats and joined the newly founded New Slovenia – Christian People's Party. In the elections of 2000, both of Slovenia's conservative and christian democratic parties suffered a defeat against Drnovšek's Liberal Democracy of Slovenia, while the Slovenian Social Democratic Party assumed the undisputed leadership of the centre-right opposition.
In the 2004 elections to the European Parliament, Peterle was elected for New Slovenia, a member of the European People's Party (EPP). In March 2006, he was elected as Vice President of the European People's Party for a three-year term after recovering from cancer in April 2003.
In November 2006, he announced that he will be running for President of Slovenia in the 2007 presidential election. He was considered the front-runner before the first round of the election, but ultimately lost in a landslide to Danilo Türk in the second round.
He is a founder and current President of the group MEPs Against Cancer (MAC).
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Chairmen of the Executive Council Dušan Šinigoj |
Prime Minister of Slovenia 16 May 1990 – 14 May 1992 |
Succeeded by Janez Drnovšek |
Preceded by Dimitrij Rupel |
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia 25 January 1993 – 31 October 1994 |
Succeeded by Zoran Thaler |
Preceded by Dimitrij Rupel |
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia 7 June 2000 – 30 November 2000 |
Succeeded by Dimitrij Rupel |
Party political offices | ||
Preceded by Peter Kovačič Peršin |
President of the Slovene Christian Democrats 1989–2000 |
Succeeded by office abolished |
References
- ↑ "Your MEPs:Alojz PETERLE". European Parliament. Retrieved 21 March 2010.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lojze Peterle. |
- Official Website
- Personal profile of Lojze Peterle in the European Parliament's database of members
- Declaration (PDF) of financial interests (Slovene)
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