Misplaced Pages

Klaus Iohannis

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Mihaister (talk | contribs) at 05:18, 21 November 2014 (removed redundant section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 05:18, 21 November 2014 by Mihaister (talk | contribs) (removed redundant section)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
This article may be affected by a current event. Information in this article may change rapidly as the event progresses. Initial news reports may be unreliable. The last updates to this article may not reflect the most current information. Please feel free to improve this article (but note that updates without valid and reliable references will be removed) or discuss changes on the talk page. (November 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Klaus Iohannis
President of Romania
Elect
Assuming office
21 December 2014
Prime MinisterVictor Ponta
SucceedingTraian Băsescu
Mayor of Sibiu
Incumbent
Assumed office
30 June 2000
Preceded byDan Condurat
Leader of the National Liberal Party
Incumbent
Assumed office
28 June 2014
Preceded byCrin Antonescu
Leader of the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania
In office
2002–2013
Preceded byWolfgang Wittstock
Succeeded byPaul-Jürgen Porr
Personal details
BornKlaus Werner Johannis
(1959-06-13) June 13, 1959 (age 65)
Sibiu, Romania
Political partyDemocratic Forum of Germans in Romania (1990–2013)
National Liberal Party (2013–present)
SpouseCarmen Iohannis (1989–present)
Alma materBabeș-Bolyai University
WebsiteOfficial website

Klaus Werner Iohannis (Template:IPA-ro, Template:IPA-de; also spelled Johannis) (born 13 June 1959) is a Romanian politician. He was elected the fifth President of Romania on 16 November 2014. He became leader of the National Liberal Party in 2014, after having served as leader of the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania from 2002 to 2013. Iohannis was a physics teacher and a school inspector before entering full-time politics.

Iohannis was first elected mayor of the city of Sibiu in 2000, representing the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania. Although the German population of the once predominantly German-speaking city of Sibiu has declined to a tiny minority, Iohannis won a surprise victory and was re-elected by landslides in 2004, 2008 and 2012. Iohannis is credited with turning his city into one of Romania's most popular tourist destinations, and the city was declared a European Capital of Culture in 2007. In February 2013, Iohannis became a member of the National Liberal Party, accepting an invitation from Liberal leader Crin Antonescu, and was immediately elected the party's First Vice President, becoming the party's President the following year.

In October 2009, four of the five political groups in the Parliament, excluding the Democrat Liberal Party of then-President Traian Băsescu, proposed him as a candidate for the office of Prime Minister of Romania; however, Băsescu refused to nominate him despite the Parliament's adoption of a declaration supporting his candidacy. He was again the candidate for Prime Minister of the National Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party in the elections in the same year.

Iohannis is a Transylvanian Saxon, part of Romania's German minority which settled in Transylvania in the 12th century.

Personal and professional life

Born in a house in the historic centre of Sibiu to a Transylvanian Saxon family, Klaus Iohannis is the eldest child of Susanne and Gustav Heinz Johannis. He has one sister, Krista Johannis. Both his parents as well as his sister emigrated from their native Sibiu (German: Hermannstadt) to Würzburg in Germany in 1992, acquiring citizenship there under the right of return granted by German nationality law, as most other Transylvanian Saxons after the fall of the Iron Curtain. As of 2014, his parents, sister and a niece live in Würzburg. Iohannis has stated that his family settled in Transylvania in present-day Romania 850 years ago. Furthermore he did not follow his family to Germany because his wife wished to stay in Romania.

After graduating from the Faculty of Physics of the Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca in 1983, Iohannis worked as a high school physics teacher at various schools and colleges in Sibiu, including, from 1989 to 1997, the Samuel von Brukenthal Gymnasium in Sibiu, the oldest German-speaking school in Romania. From 1997 to 1999, he was Deputy General School Inspector of Sibiu County, and from 1999 until his election as mayor in 2000, he was the General School Inspector, head of public schools in the county.

Iohannis is fluent in German and Romanian at a native level and also speaks English. The original spelling of his name (which is German) is Johannis, but the name was registered by a Romanian official as Iohannis on his birth certificate and he has used both spellings interchangeably. In 1989, he married ethnic Romanian Carmen Georgeta Lăzurca, an English teacher at the Gheorghe Lazăr National College in Sibiu. They have no children.

Iohannis is a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Augsburg Confession in Romania, the German-speaking Lutheran church in Transylvania.

Political career

He joined the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania in 1990, and served as a member of its board of education in Transylvania from 1997, and a member of the local party board in Sibiu from 1998. In 2001, he was elected President of the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania.

Mayor of Sibiu

In 2000, the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania (FDGR) in Sibiu decided to back him as a candidate for mayor. Despite the fact that Sibiu's German minority had shrunken to a mere 1.6%, Iohannis was elected with 69.18% of the votes and has won three re-elections in a row, getting some of the largest electoral scores in the country: 88.7% of the vote in 2004, and 87.4% in 2008. He is the first ethnic German mayor of a Romanian city since Albert Dörr, who served from 1940 to 1945. The small German minority is popular in Romania, where they are often viewed as hard-working, precise and uncompromising. Many Romanians also remember that the country experienced some of its best moments under German kings over a century ago.

Throughout his tenure as mayor, he has worked to restore the town's infrastructure and to tighten the city administration. Iohannis is also widely credited with turning the city into one of Romania's most popular tourist destinations thanks to the extensive renovation of the old downtown. During his first term, Iohannis worked with a city council that had a social democrat majority. Since 2004, during his second and third terms, his own party, FDGR, had the majority. Since 2008, FDGR has 14 out of 23 councilors, PDL has 4, PSD has 3, and PNL has 2.

Iohannis established contacts with foreign officials and investors. Sibiu was declared the European Capital of Culture of 2007, along with Luxembourg (the bearer of the distinction in 1995). Luxembourg chose to share this honourable status with Sibiu due to the fact that many of the Transylvanian Saxons emigrated in the 12th century to Transylvania from the area where Luxembourg is today. Sibiu, or Hermannstadt in German, was built by the Transylvanian Saxons, was for many centuries the cultural centre of that group, and was a predominantly German-speaking city until the mid 20th century. Many Germans left the city after World War II, and especially in 1990, within months of the fall of the Iron Curtain.

On November 4, 2005, Iohannis was nominated as the "Personality of the Year for a European Romania" (Personalitatea anului pentru o Românie europeană) by the Eurolink – House of Europe organization.

Candidate for Prime Minister of Romania

On October 14, 2009, the leaders of the opposition parliamentary groups (the National Liberal Party, the Social Democratic Party, the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania, and the group of smaller ethnic minorities), proposed Iohannis as a candidate for Prime Minister of Romania, after the government of Prime Minister Emil Boc fell a day before as a result of a motion of no confidence in the Parliament. Coming from outside the national-level politics of Romania, Iohannis has the image of an independent politician, although his party has consistently allied itself with, and Iohannis has campaigned in the latest European Parliament elections for the National Liberal Party. The National Liberal Party (PNL), the Social Democratic Party (PSD), the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR), and the group of small ethnic minorities in the Parliament subsumed Iohannis as their common candidate for Prime Minister of an interim government. On October 14, Klaus Iohannis confirmed acceptance of his candidacy. However, on October 15, the President Traian Băsescu nominated Lucian Croitoru, a top Romanian economist, as Prime Minister, and charged the latter with forming the country's next government.

After the second round of talks, a day before Croitoru's nomination, Băsescu noted: "Some parties have proposed Klaus Iohannis. I would like you to know that I have not rejected the possibility for him to become Prime Minister in the condition that my options would be directed towards other solutions. But I have rejected such a proposal because it comes from PSD or another party ", referring to his alleged constraint to consider a proposal of the largest party (PDL), constraint disputed by the other parties. The opposition criticized the President for not designating Iohannis. Social Democrat leader Mircea Geoană accused Băsescu of trying to influence the upcoming presidential elections by having them organized by a sympathetic government. Crin Antonescu, the leader of the National Liberals, vowed his party would derail other nominations but Iohannis'. After the nomination of Croitoru, Antonescu, a candidate in the presidential election, stated that he would nominate Iohannis as Prime Minister if elected President. Three days later, on October 18, Geoană suggested Antonescu was trying to use Iohannis as an "electoral agent" for Antonescu's bid for president. In response, Antonescu told the press that Iohannis "is not the type of person that would let himself being used". Geoană and PSD leadership has held a second meeting with Iohannis in Bucharest in the evening of October 18. UDMR, which the previous day announced it would also attend, declared in the morning that all their leaders are not in the city. PNL was present at the meeting by lower level representatives, after Antonescu announced in the morning he is on campaign in Cluj-Napoca. On October 21, the Parliament adopted with 252 votes for (of PSD, PNL, UDMR and minorities groups) and 2 against a declaration requesting the President to nominate Iohannis as Prime Minister.

In the National Liberal Party

On February 20, 2013, Klaus Iohannis joined the PNL, announcing this during a press conference with Crin Antonescu. At a PNL extraordinary congress, he was elected First Vice President of the Party. In the meeting of 28 June 2014, he was elected President of the PNL with 95% of the votes.

Candidacy for President of Romania

In 2009, Iohannis had stated that he might possibly run for the office of President of Romania, although not in 2009. Former Prime Minister Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu had said on October 27, 2009 and again on April 23, 2010 that he would like to see Iohannis become President of Romania.

PNL and PDL started in the summer of 2014 procedures to strengthen the political right. The two parties will eventually merge under the name PNL, but went for elections in an alliance: the Liberal Christian Alliance (Alianța Creștin-Liberală). On August 11, the alliance chose Iohannis as its candidate for the presidential election in November and so he was registered as an official presidential candidate. He received 30.37% of the votes in the first round.

At the second round on November 16 he was elected President of Romania with 54,43% of the votes.

President-Elect of Romania

On November 16th, Klaus Iohannis was elected the fifth President of Romania, winning against the PSD candidate Victor-Viorel Ponta. Iohannis won the elections with 54.43% of the votes. He is due to take office on 22 December, when Traian Băsescu's term ends. His presidential campaign focused on fighting corruption and on improving the justice system. He is the first Romanian president of German descent.

Honours

References

  1. "Romanian opposition demands new PM". euronews. Retrieved November 16, 2014.
  2. "National minorities in Romania's Parliament support Mircea Geoana's candidacy for runoff presidential election - FINANCIARUL - ultimele stiri din Finante, Banci, Economie, Imobiliare si IT". Retrieved November 16, 2014.
  3. Ramona Găină (September 24, 2014). "Klaus Iohannis. Secretele neamțului care vrea să fie președintele României". Adevărul (in Romanian).
  4. Die Lokomotive von Hermannstadt, interview with Gustav Heinz Johannis, in: Monatsgruß (monthly magazine of the Evangelical-Lutheran dean of Würzburg), October 2007, p. 5.
  5. ^ Grim Romanians Brighten Over a German Connection. New York Times 2009-12-06.
  6. http://www.br.de/nachrichten/unterfranken/inhalt/rumaenischer-praesident-johannis-eltern-wuerzburg-100.html
  7. http://adevarul.ro/news/politica/iohannis-adevarul-live-stramosii-venit-850-ani-transilvania-n-am-vrut-niciodata-plec-romania-1_53e20a820d133766a80e014b/index.html
  8. http://www.digi24.ro/Stiri/Digi24/Actualitate/Politica/De+la+doamna+profesoara+la+Prima+Doamna+Cine+este+Carmen+Iohanni
  9. http://www.dw.de/romanian-presidential-candidate-klaus-iohannis-a-pragmatic-go-getter/a-18068149
  10. http://www.klausjohannis.ro/
  11. http://www.evz.ro/articole/detalii-articol/871880/Carmen-Johannis-sfetnicul-din-umbra/
  12. http://www.realitatea.net/klaus-johannis-spune-ca-a-votat-pentru-normalitate_687833.html
  13. http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/rumaeniens-praesident-klaus-johannis-gewinnt-wahl-ponta-gratuliert-a-1003292.html
  14. The Himalayan Times, 2009-10-14: Romanian prez proposes unity govt. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  15. Template:Ro icon Sibiu City Council composition at Sibiu's Local Administration's webpage. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  16. Sibiu – Hermannstadt: European Capital of Culture 2007. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  17. "Democratic Liberals submit their own nomination for prime minister. Other parties keep supporting their own nomination", Hotnews.ro, October 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  18. Template:Ro icon Mircea Geoană, Crin Antonescu, Bela Marko, Varujan Pambuccian, Daniela Popa, Open letter to Traian Băsescu. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  19. Template:Ro icon "Băsescu spune ca n-are nimic cu Iohannis dar România are nevoie de un premier cu experiență în economie" ("Băsescu Says He Has Nothing against Iohannis but that Romania Needs a Prime Minister with Economic Experience"), Ziarul Financiar, October 14, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-16
  20. Template:Ro icon PNL, PSD si UDMR l-au "desemnat" pe Johannis premier, desi neamtul nu e pe gustul lui Basescu, Ziarul Financiar, October 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-21
  21. ^ "Romanian President names prime minister designate, opposition seething", The Sofia Echo, October 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  22. "Geoana-Basescu cam put an end on Wednesday to political crisis", Financiarul.ro, October 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  23. "Johannis ready to head national union gov’t", Financiarul.ro, October 15, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  24. "Geoană și Antonescu își dispută "agentul electoral" Johannis", Evenimentul Zilei, October 18, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
  25. "UDMR nu participa la intalnirea de duminica seara cu Klaus Johannis", Hotnews.ro, October 18, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
  26. Johannis, „validat premier” în parlament, Evenimentul Zilei, October 21. Retrieved 2009-10-21
  27. "Parlamentarii au adoptat declarația de susținere a lui Klaus Iohannis la funcția de premier", Cotidianul, October 21, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-22
  28. "Portalul national de Administratie Publica". Retrieved November 16, 2014.
  29. "Tăriceanu: "Îl văd pe Iohannis fie premier, fie preşedinte"". Retrieved November 16, 2014.
  30. Irina Popescu (August 11, 2014). "Romania's Christian Liberal Alliance chooses its presidential candidate". Romania-Insider.com.
  31. "Klaus Iohannis wins Romanian presidential election". the Guardian. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  32. ^ "Klaus Iohannis, ales președinte al PNL". Agerpres (in Romanian). June 28, 2014.
  33. Klaus Johannis a fost decorat cu Ordinul Național Steaua României
  34. "Reply to a parliamentary question about the Decoration of Honour" (pdf) (in German). p. 1922. Retrieved November 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |trans_title= (help)
  35. "Distincții primite". Klaus Iohannis (in Romanian).
  36. ^ "CV Klaus Iohannis" (PDF). Klaus Iohannis Președinte (in Romanian).

External links

Political offices
Preceded byDan Condurat Mayor of Sibiu
2000–2014
Succeeded byTBD
Preceded byTraian Băsescu President of Romania
Elect

2014–present
Incumbent
Party political offices
Preceded byWolfgang Wittstock Leader of the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania
2002–2013
Succeeded byPaul-Jürgen Porr
Preceded byLudovic Orban Deputy Leader of the National Liberal Party
2013–2014
Succeeded byTBD
Preceded byCrin Antonescu Leader of the National Liberal Party
2014–present
Incumbent
Presidents of the National Liberal Party
Klaus Iohannis
Political activities
Parties
Elections
Family
Events
Heads of state of Romania
United Principalities of Romania
Domnitor of Romania (1862–1881)
1862–1866
Princely Lieutenancy [ro]
1866–1881
Kingdom of Romania
King of Romania (1881–1947)
1881–1914
1914–1927
1927–1930
1930–1940
1940–1947
Romanian People's Republic (1947–65)
Socialist Republic of Romania
(1965–89)
Provisional Presidium of the Republic (1947–1948)
Presidium of the Great National Assembly (1948–1961)
State Council (1961–1974)
President of SR Romania (1974–1989)
Post–1989 Romania
President of Romania (1989–present)
Italics indicate interim officeholders. Bold indicates incumbent/current officeholder.

Template:Persondata

Categories: