- Vladimír Špidla
Infobox Prime Minister
name=Vladimír Špidla
order =European Commissioner for Employment, Social Affairs & Equal Opportunities
term_start =22 November ,2004
term_end =
predecessor =Anna Diamantopoulou
successor =Incumbent
order2=4th
office2=Prime Minister of the Czech Republic
term_start2 =12 July 2002
term_end2 =19 July 2004
predecessor2 =Miloš Zeman
successor2 =Stanislav Gross
office3=Chairman ofCzech Social Democratic Party
term_start3 =April 2001
term_end3 =26 June 2004
predecessor3 =Miloš Zeman
successor3 =Stanislav Gross
birth_date =birth date and age|1951|4|21|df=y
birth_place =flagicon|CzechoslovakiaPrague ,Czechoslovakia
party=ČSSD (PES)Vladimír Špidla (pronounced|vlaɪmiːr ʃpɪdla) (born
21 April 1951 inPrague ) is a Czechsocial democrat icpolitician . He was the Prime Minister of theCzech Republic in July 2002 - June 2004 and then was appointed Czech commissioner in theEuropean Commission where he will serve at the post of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities.Špidla studied
history atCharles University of Prague . Histhesis was "Založení Živnostenské banky" (Establishment of the Trading Bank). After his graduation in 1976, he took up a number of jobs including menial as he refused to fulfil political obligations necessary for better-qualified ones; he also worked as anarchaeologist . He is married for the second time; he has two sons from his first marriage and another two children acquired by marriage. His hobbies include cross-country and marathon running. He speaks German and French, but his English is weaker; this was used to doubt his qualification for the EC.Political career
After the
Velvet revolution he entered local politics in the town of Jindřichův Hradec where he lived and immediately joined the re-foundedCzech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD, then called "Czechoslovak Social Democracy"). In 1991-1996 he served as the director of the local job centre. In 1992, he became a member of the Presidium of ČSSD, in March 1997 its statutory Vice-Chairman, and in April 2001 Chairman of ČSSD after its previous chairmanMiloš Zeman stepped aside. In 1996 he was elected to the parliament. He held the post of the First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Labour and Social Affairs in Zeman's government (22 July ,1998 to12 July ,2002 ).He was appointed as Prime Minister on
12 July 2002 in the coalition government of his ČSSD together with smallChristian Democratic Union - Czechoslovak People's Party andFreedom Union-Democratic Union . During that time, he also held President's powers from2 February ,2003 until7 March ,2003 , as the term of the President had ended before the Parliament could elect a new one. His government tried, with great difficulties due to tensions within coalition and its bare majority in the parliament, to introduce reforms necessary to battle the growing budget deficit; however they were criticised by the opposition and pundits as being too mild and consisting rather of increasing taxes than cutting expenses and stimulating economic growth, with the government unwilling (and partly also unable due to its precarious situation) to take radical measures. Špidla resigned as Prime Minister in June 2004 after poor results of his party and coalition in general in theEuropean Parliament election, 2004 and loss of support within ČSSD, and officially left office on26 July 2004 . Mild economic growth during his duty as prime minister, however, continued ( GDP 3.3% in 2001, 2.9% est. in 2004). He was succeeded by interior minister and deputy prime ministerStanislav Gross whose government will however not differ much from the previous one and was officially appointed on4 August . After a short hesitation Špidla accepted nomination to theEuropean Commission , where, as of22 November 2004 , he is European Commissioner for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities.Špidla is considered a part of ČSSD's left wing (though he's strongly anti-communist); in foreign policy, he has always been strongly pro-European and supports further integration. His generally accepted image is a man of personal integrity and honesty (putting him at the top of Czech politicians) but a dry technocrat who couldn't communicate his undeniable statesman's vision to the public and wasn't even able to keep his own party in line as his predecessor did. His acceptance of the EC post was criticised as a "
golden parachute ", ousting the previous comparatively popular person, appointed by his own government, but also as running away from his battle to steer the course of ČSSD and Czech politics.Personal blunders
He has often been ridiculed for the odd habit of showing odd grimases and even throwing them at people in response. He put forward such a reaction in tv discussion programme Kotel, where he grimaced at the lay participants before answering.
ee also
*
Politics of the Czech Republic
*Czech Social Democratic Party
*List of Prime Ministers of the Czech Republic External links
* [http://wtd.vlada.cz/scripts/detail.php?id=2454 Official biography at Czech government website] - out of date
* [http://ec.europa.eu/commission_barroso/spidla/index_en.cfm Current official website (in European Commission)]
* [http://www.euractiv.com/Article?tcmuri=tcm:29-154250-16&type=Interview Interview with Špidla on labour mobility (by EurActiv)]
* [http://ec.europa.eu/employment_social/emplweb/spidla/blog_cs.cfm Blog written by Špidla]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.