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Although surrounded by a loyal following, Klaus also has vocal opponents. As mentioned earlier, one of the contested issues is his relation to [[communism]], both in the past and as a strong modern-day politician: Klaus has published articles praising "the grey zone" of the majority of ordinary people who passively endured the regime, while downplaying the importance of the small minority of [[dissident]]s like Havel because of their "haughtiness." This is held by some to part of his wish to denigrate parts of Czech history which cannot claim part of. A similar approach can be seen in his changing views of Masaryk.{{Fact|date=February 2008}}
Although surrounded by a loyal following, Klaus also has vocal opponents. As mentioned earlier, one of the contested issues is his relation to [[communism]], both in the past and as a strong modern-day politician: Klaus has published articles praising "the grey zone" of the majority of ordinary people who passively endured the regime, while downplaying the importance of the small minority of [[dissident]]s like Havel because of their "haughtiness." This is held by some to part of his wish to denigrate parts of Czech history which cannot claim part of. A similar approach can be seen in his changing views of Masaryk.{{Fact|date=February 2008}}


Although Klaus used to criticize Havel for having used his power to [[veto]] the laws and promised restrain, he does so rather more frequently than him, usually to avoid introduction of new regulations he considers unnecessary or illiberal.<ref> [http://www.praguepost.com/articles/2006/03/08/hard-to-get-a-law-by-vaclav-klaus.php Hard to get a law by Václav Klaus], ''[[Prague Post]]'' [[8 March]] [[2006]]</ref> Among the vetoed bills was also the [[registered partnership]] act; Klaus believed that special laws for married couples were designed with a narrow goal that might not apply to [[gay]]s, making the law unjustified.{{Fact|date=February 2008}} In his public statement vetoing the bill he described it as being "dangerous" and representing militant "homosexualism." His veto of was overturned by the Parliament in March 2006, the Czech Republic becoming the first post-communist country to grant legal recognition to same-sex partnerships. He also vetoed the Anti-Discrimination Law passed by parliament in 2008, saying truthfully it's a dangerous thread to freedom of an individual.
Although Klaus used to criticize Havel for having used his power to [[veto]] the laws and promised restrain, he does so rather more frequently than him, usually to avoid introduction of new regulations he considers unnecessary or illiberal.<ref> [http://www.praguepost.com/articles/2006/03/08/hard-to-get-a-law-by-vaclav-klaus.php Hard to get a law by Václav Klaus], ''[[Prague Post]]'' [[8 March]] [[2006]]</ref> Among the vetoed bills was also the [[registered partnership]] act; Klaus believed that special laws for married couples were designed with a narrow goal that might not apply to [[gay]]s, making the law unjustified.{{Fact|date=February 2008}} In his public statement vetoing the bill he described it as being "dangerous" and representing militant "homosexualism." His veto of was overturned by the Parliament in March 2006, the Czech Republic becoming the first post-communist country to grant legal recognition to same-sex partnerships. He also vetoed the Anti-Discrimination Law passed by parliament in 2008, saying it's a dangerous thread to freedom of an individual.


===Foreign policy===
===Foreign policy===

Revision as of 18:26, 25 May 2008

Václav Klaus
President of the Czech Republic
Assumed office
07 March 2003
Prime MinisterMirek Topolánek
Preceded byVáclav Havel
Chairman of the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic
In office
17 July 1998 – 20 June 2002
Prime MinisterMiloš Zeman
Preceded byMiloš Zeman
Succeeded byLubomír Zaorálek
Prime Minister of the Czech Republic
In office
1 January 1993 – 17 December 1997
PresidentVáclav Havel
Preceded byoffice created
Succeeded byJosef Tošovský
Prime Minister of the Czech Republic within the Federation
In office
2 July 1992 – 31 December 1992
PresidentVáclav Havel
Preceded byPetr Pithart
Succeeded byoffice abolished
Minister of Finance of the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic
In office
10 December 1989 – 2 July 1992
Prime MinisterMarián Čalfa
Preceded byJan Stejskal
Succeeded byJan Klak (Federal Minister of Finance)
Ivan Kočárník (Minister of Finance of the Czech Republic)
Personal details
Born (1941-06-19) 19 June 1941 (age 82)
Prague, Bohemia and Moravia
Political partyODS
SpouseLivia Klausová
Alma materUniversity of Economics, Prague
OccupationEconomist
Websitewww.klaus.cz

Václav Klaus (IPA: [ˈvaːtslaf ˈklaʊ̯s]; born 19 June 1941) is the second President of the Czech Republic and a former Prime Minister of the Czech Republic (1992 – 1997). He is co-founder of the Civic Democratic Party, one of the Czech Republic's major political parties.[1]

Biography

Klaus grew up in the Vinohrady neighborhood of Prague and graduated from the University of Economics, Prague in 1963; he also spent some time at universities in Italy (1966) and Cornell University in the United States (1969).

During the Prague Spring he published articles on economics in the pro-reform, non-communist magazine Tvář (The Face) and the leading weekly Literární noviny. He then pursued a postgraduate academic career at the (state) Institute of Economics of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, which he left (by his account, being forced out for political reasons) in 1970. From 1971 to 1986, he held various positions at the Czechoslovak State Bank. In 1987 Klaus joined the reform-minded Prognostics Institute of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences.

In 1995, as Prime Minister, he applied for and was eventually awarded a degree of Professor of Finance from his alma mater, so he is sometimes addressed "Mr. Professor" by his sympathisers. As the president, Klaus occasionally taught a seminar course in economics at the University of Economics, Prague.

Since 1990, Václav Klaus has received nearly 50 honorary degrees and published over 20 books on various social, political, and economics subjects which are overwhelmingly collections of articles and speeches; the most recent of these are five yearbooks of his presidential activities. Klaus is a member of the Mont Pelerin Society. He has published articles in the free market-oriented Cato Journal. On May 28, 2008, Klaus is scheduled to give the keynote address at an annual dinner hosted by the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), a free market advocacy group based in Washington, D.C. Klaus is also CEI's 2008 Julian L. Simon Memorial Award recipient.

Klaus the economist

His vocal enthusiasm for the free market economy and as exemplified by Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman and practised by Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, together with his stated belief in Adam Smith's "Invisible Hand", soon became well-known and Klaus was the principal shaper of the Czechoslovak economic transformation. His critics later on pointed out that during his premiership he had neglected the importance of law (in particular battling corruption), largely ignored the enforcement of property rights on the stock market, and that his pet project, the voucher privatization, was poorly executed and didn't bring the economy responsible owners it needed. They claim that his record in government does not justify the picture of Klaus as a major free-market figure. His avowed aim of creating a nation which participated in the capitalist system as shareholders signally failed, with most of the privatisations of his tenure ending up in relatively few, and often opaque, hands.[citation needed]

Early political career

Václav Klaus entered politics soon after the Velvet Revolution in 1989 . As a member (and from October 1990, chairman) of Civic Forum he became the federal Minister of Finance, a position he held until July 1992. In April 1991 Klaus co-founded the Civic Democratic Party (Občanská demokratická strana, ODS), the strongest and most economically right-wing of the post-Civic Forum splinter parties. He remained its chairman until December 2002 when he resigned after a string of election defeats. He is now its honorary chairman.

Premiership

In June 1992, ODS won the elections in the Czech Republic with a reform program; but the winner in Slovakia was Vladimír Mečiar's nationalistic Movement for a Democratic Slovakia. It soon became apparent that Slovak demands for increased sovereignty were incompatible with the limited "viable federation" supported by the Czechs; both leaders assumed the premiership in their respective polities and quickly agreed, without a referendum, on a smooth division of Czechoslovakia and its assets under a caretaker federal government, later dubbed Velvet Divorce.

Scandals

Klaus continued as Prime Minister after the 1996 election, but the ODS's win was much narrower and his government was plagued by instability, serious economic problems, and accusations of corruption. He was forced to resign[2] in November 1997 after a government crisis caused by an ODS funding scandal, an event later called "Sarajevo Assassination" (sarajevský atentát) by his sympathisers, in analogy with the assassination in Sarajevo that has started the First World War, because the calls for him to resign occurred during his visit of Sarajevo at that time. He has consistently refused to accept responsibility for or discuss any of the corruption scandals which arose within his party and under his government.[3]

Czech President Václav Havel publicly referred to Klaus' economic policies as "gangster capitalism" and blamed the prime minister for perceived corruption surrounding his policy of voucher privatization and his côterie of close allies such as the dentist, politician, and entrepreneur Miroslav Macek or StB honcho Václav Junek[citation needed]. In his 5 years as President, Klaus has only occasionally referred to corruption. [citation needed].

Defeats

Klaus, stunned for a moment by his downfall, was encouraged by his nearest and quickly rallied forces to fight. At the mid-December IX. congress, he was confirmed as chairman by 227 votes of 312 delegates; the defeated faction left ODS and in early 1998 established a new party named Freedom Union (Unie svobody, US) with president Václav Havel's unconcealed sympathies.

ODS lost the June premature election to Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD). Still, the results (unlike any following) would have allowed both of them to achieve a safe majority with smaller center parties. However US chairman Jan Ruml refused to support ČSSD on principle, and there was too much distrust of "traitors" in ODS. To general surprise, Klaus struck an "opposition agreement" (opoziční smlouva) with ČSSD chairman Miloš Zeman, his traditional foe though both also had much mutual respect: ODS tolerated Zeman's minority government in exchange for various concessions and posts, including the Speaker of Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic for Klaus, with hints of possible prolongation after turnaround in future election.[4]

ODS went to the elections of June 2002 relying on Klaus's image: pre-recorded mass phone calls (used for the first time in Czech campaigns and rather criticised) about "mobilisation" against left-wing danger or his huge billboard at the former site of Stalin's Monument. But in a TV debate as well as at the polls he was again defeated by ČSSD's new leader Vladimír Špidla, who had explicitly refused the opposition agreement, which had become to be perceived as embodiment of stagnation, corruption and attempts to duopolise power despite the constitutional proportional representation. Špidla created a left-center coalition (which indeed led to political death of the hapless US). After long hesitation, and having suffered a further substantial loss in the October Senate elections, Klaus bowed to mounting pressure and didn't run for re-election at the December congress (which unanimously declared him honorary chairman). Against his wishes he was succeeded by Mirek Topolánek.[5]

Presidency

Standard of the President of the Czech Republic

Having lost two general elections in a row, Klaus' hold on the ODS appeared to become weaker, and he announced his intention of stepping down from the leadership and run for President succeeding Václav Havel, who had been one of his greatest political opponents since the division of Czechoslovakia. This was taken by many to be a graceful way of retiring. However the governing coalition, buffeted especially by feuds within ČSSD, was unable to agree on a common candidate to oppose him.

Klaus was elected President of the Czech Republic by secret ballot in a joint session of both chambers of parliament on February 28, 2003 after two failed elections earlier in the month, in the third round of the election (both chambers vote on two top candidates jointly). He won with a narrow majority of 142 votes out of 281, with support across every parliament club (Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia being no exception). In 2008 the Communist chairman said that on the eve of the 2003 invasion of Iraq and Czech accession to the European Union, a President skeptical to both was a good balance to the government (and his last counter-candidate)'s "euro-fanaticism".[6]

Václav Klaus in 2005

Relationship with communists

Unlike Havel, Klaus modified his previously strident rhetoric following his election with the support of communist votes to say that considers himself to be a "non-communist" but not an anti-communist, a label he claims to reject as a cheap and superficial posturing although he has warned against the traditional 'red scare' during two election campaigns against ČSSD. By some this is viewed as delivering part of his secret deal to secure the presidency.[citation needed] As a president "representing the whole nation," he invited representatives of all parties including the communists, who were not allowed to enter the Prague Castle throughout the 13 years of Havel's presidency. Nevertheless, in 2005 and 2006 Klaus repeatedly stated that he would refuse to appoint a cabinet which depended on communist support either directly or indirectly.

Although surrounded by a loyal following, Klaus also has vocal opponents. As mentioned earlier, one of the contested issues is his relation to communism, both in the past and as a strong modern-day politician: Klaus has published articles praising "the grey zone" of the majority of ordinary people who passively endured the regime, while downplaying the importance of the small minority of dissidents like Havel because of their "haughtiness." This is held by some to part of his wish to denigrate parts of Czech history which cannot claim part of. A similar approach can be seen in his changing views of Masaryk.[citation needed]

Although Klaus used to criticize Havel for having used his power to veto the laws and promised restrain, he does so rather more frequently than him, usually to avoid introduction of new regulations he considers unnecessary or illiberal.[7] Among the vetoed bills was also the registered partnership act; Klaus believed that special laws for married couples were designed with a narrow goal that might not apply to gays, making the law unjustified.[citation needed] In his public statement vetoing the bill he described it as being "dangerous" and representing militant "homosexualism." His veto of was overturned by the Parliament in March 2006, the Czech Republic becoming the first post-communist country to grant legal recognition to same-sex partnerships. He also vetoed the Anti-Discrimination Law passed by parliament in 2008, saying it's a dangerous thread to freedom of an individual.

Foreign policy

File:Klaus and Tadic.jpg
Václav Klaus meeting Boris Tadić, President of Serbia, in Prague

Klaus' Euroscepticism - perhaps being joined by his skepticism of the existence of anthropogenic climate change - is a defining policy position of his presidency, and he includes criticisms of the "democratic deficit" and "centralization" of EU in many public statements.[citation needed] Some European hosts viewed his statements as insulting and beyond proper diplomatic behavior - Latvia and Finland being two examples of this[citation needed]. He claimed that accession to the Union represented a significant reduction of Czech sovereignty and he chose not to give any recommendation before the 2003 accession referendum (77% voted yes).

Klaus' Eurosceptic activism has involved writing many articles and giving many speeches against any sharing of sovereignty with the EU. He assisted in the Czech publication of a work by the Irish Eurosceptic Anthony Coughlan of left alignments and a record of campaigning against EU treaties. In 2005 Klaus called for the EU to be "scrapped" and replaced by a free-trade area to be called the "Organisation of European States." Klaus is occasionally chastised by journalists who want him to change his positions toward the EU, arguing that it should be more than a free trade zone. Although he sometimes concedes to this, his skepticism about the internal mechanisms of the EU is often very outspoken. For example, in 2005 he remarked to a group of visiting U.S. politicians that the EU was a "failed and bankrupt entity."

He has reversed Havel's policy of avoiding many countries like China. His first major visit was to Russia and in 2006 he hosted Vladimir Putin in a style which was described by some pundits as "borderline-sycophancy" including using the Russian language to converse with him. [citation needed] Klaus received the 2007 Pushkin Medal for the promotion of Russian culture from Putin due to his use of Russian with Putin and with Russian diplomats.[8][9]

Klaus speaks several languages and is not ashamed of showing his skills - even insisting that he could demand language qualifications from ministerial nominees. Klaus has tried to avoid conflicts with Russia and maintain friendly relationships with the former ally. He disagrees with some of the sharp criticisms of the recent developments in Russia, claiming that the situation is better than expected from a country with minimal democratic traditions[citation needed] and the necessity of a strong leader in Russia to organize political parties.[10]

Václav Klaus has on many occasions voiced his disagreement with Kosovo declaration of independence. During his visit to Bratislava in March 2008, Václav Klaus categorically rejected the argument that Kosovo was a special case and said that it set a precedent. He said that by recognizing Kosovo, those countries that did so opened a Pandora's box in Europe that could have disastrous consequences, comparing Kosovo's independence to the 1938 Munich treaty.[11][12]


Re-election

The Czech Presidential election of 2008 differed from past ones in that the voting was on the record, rather than by secret ballot. This was a precondition demanded by most of the Czech political parties, but long opposed by Klaus' Civic Democratic Party (ODS).[13]

Klaus' main opponent was the pro-European, University of Michigan economics professor and naturalized United States citizen Jan Švejnar.[14] He was nominated by Green Party, gaining the support of the leading opposition Czech Social Democratic Party, a smaller part of KDU-ČSL and most independent Senators. The first ballot on 8 and 9 February 2008 resulted in no winner after three rounds. Klaus led in those rounds, but barely failed to achieve the requisite majority from the assembly as a whole. Švejnar won the lower chamber of the legislature, while Klaus had majority in the Senate.[13]

The second ballot on Friday 15 February 2008 brought with it a new candidate — MEP Jana Bobošíková, nominated by the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia. However, she withdrew her candidacy before the election itself, because she didn't achieve any wider support.[14] The first and second rounds of this new ballot ended with similar results to the previous weekend. However, Klaus consistently had 141 votes from the whole legislature throughout all three rounds. Thus in the third round, where the only goal is to achieve a majority of all legislators present from both houses, Klaus barely won. Švejnar received 111 votes, the Communists voting for neither.[15]

Although the Presidency is not directly elected by the citizenry of the Czech Republic, several public opinion polls taken in the run-up to the final ballot suggested a level of ambiguity among the Czechs. Opinion seemed to sway from narrowly supporting Švejnar in January, to a dead heat, and finally to narrowly supporting the incumbent a day before the first ballot was held.[14][16]

Klaus' re-election was partially the result of three Social Democrats breaking with their party, tipping the election towards Klaus. Supporters of both candidates accused the other side of using threats and significant financial inducements to influence the outcome.[13] These allegations remain unproven.

Klaus' first term as President concluded on Friday 7 March 2008; he took oath for the second term on the same day so as not to create a president-less interregnum since the Parliament could not otherwise come to a joint session before the following Tuesday. Thus he lost the day of overlap and his second term will end on 6 March 2013.

Dispute of global warming

Klaus is a vocal critic of the notion that any global warming is man-made (anthropogenic). "Global warming is a false myth and every serious person and scientist says so."[17] He has also criticized the IPCC climate panel as a group of politicized scientists with one-sided opinions and one-sided assignments. He has said that other top-level politicians do not expose their doubts about global warming because "a whip of political correctness strangles their voices."[18]

In addition he says "Environmentalism should belong in the social sciences" along with other "isms" such as communism, feminism, and liberalism. President Klaus said that "environmentalism is a religion" and, in an answer to the questions of the U.S. Congressmen, a "modern counterpart of communism" that seeks to change peoples' habits and economic systems.[17]

In an article for Financial Times, Klaus called ambitious environmentalism "the biggest threat to freedom, democracy, the market economy and prosperity", hinted that parts of the present political and scientific debate on the environment are suppressing freedom and democracy, and asked for readers opposing the term "scientific consensus", saying that "it is always achieved only by a loud minority, never by a silent majority".[19] He had a online Q&A session following the article.[20] He wrote that "Environmentalism, not preservation of nature (and of environment), is a leftist ideology.... Environmentalism is indeed a vehicle for bringing us socialist government at the global level. Again, my life in communism makes me oversensitive in this respect." He reiterated these statements at a showing of Martin Durkin's The Great Global Warming Swindle organised by his think tank CEP in June 2007, becoming the first head of state to endorse the film.[21] In an interview with BBC World he called the interviewer "absolutely arrogant" for claiming that a scientific consensus embracing the bulk of the world had been reached on climate change and said that he was "absolutely certain" that people would look back in 30 years and thank him.

At a high-level event on climate change at the United Nations Klaus spoke of his disbelief in global warming, calling for a second IPCC to be set up to produce competing reports, and for countries to be left alone to set their priorities and prepare their own plans for the problem.[22]

Personal life

Václav Klaus is married to Livia Klausová, an economist born in Slovakia. They have two sons, Václav (a private secondary school headmaster) and Jan (economist), and five grandchildren.

In youth, Klaus used to play basketball and minor-league volleyball; he still is an avid tennis player and skier.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Klaus, Václav (6 May 2006). "The Threats to Liberty in the 21st century". Foundation for Economic Education. Retrieved 2008-02-11.
  2. ^ Václav Klaus: the experienced and predictable, Radio Prague 7 February 2008
  3. ^ http://www.respekt.cz/clanek.php?fIDCLANKU=2333&fIDROCNIKU=2007 Template:Cs icon
  4. ^ Constitution Watch, East European Constitutional Review summer 1998
  5. ^ http://www.radio.cz/cz/zpravy/35558#2 Template:Cs icon
  6. ^ http://aktualne.centrum.cz/clanek.phtml?id=519971 {Template:Cs icon
  7. ^ Hard to get a law by Václav Klaus, Prague Post 8 March 2006
  8. ^ Czech president receives Russian Pushkin Medal - ČeskéNoviny.cz
  9. ^ News - President Klaus receives Pushkin Medal, Radio Prague
  10. ^ 10 Questions For Vaclav Klaus, Time (magazine)
  11. ^ Kosovo threatens to cause split in Czech government
  12. ^ EUROPE: To Recognise Kosovo Or Not
  13. ^ a b c Larcom, Geoff. Prague's politics a sight to see, Ann Arbor News 14 February 2008
  14. ^ a b c Janicek, Karel. U-M prof loses bid for president of Czech Republic, The Associated Press 15 February 2008
  15. ^ Klaus re-elected Czech president, Xinhua News Agency February 15, 2008
  16. ^ A January poll showing Švejnar in the lead; A February poll showing the candidates even; A February poll showing Klaus slightly favored over his rival
  17. ^ a b president: Environmentalism is a religion by Martin Barillas, Spero News, 2007-03-10.
  18. ^ Czech president derogates UN global-warming panel, m&c News, 2007-02-09.
  19. ^ Freedom, not climate, is at risk by Vaclav Klaus, 2007-06-13
  20. ^ Global warming: truth or propaganda?
  21. ^ Klaus uvedl film o podvodu s globálním oteplováním, Mladá fronta DNES 29 June 2007 Template:Cs icon
  22. ^ Václav Klaus (24 September 2007). "Notes for the speech of the President of the Czech Republic at the UN Climate Change Conference" (PDF). United Nations. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

External links

Government offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of the Czech Republic
19921997
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies of the Czech Republic
19982002
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Czech Republic
2003 – present
Incumbent