Christine Antorini

Christine Edda Antorini (born 23 May 1965, in Jyllinge) is a Danish politician for the Social Democrats, formerly for the Socialist People's Party. From 2011 to 2015 she was the Minister of Education in the Cabinet of Helle Thorning-Schmidt.[1]

Christine Antorini
Minister of Education
In office
3 October 2011  28 June 2015
Prime MinisterHelle Thorning-Schmidt
Preceded byTroels Lund Poulsen
Succeeded byEllen Trane Nørby
Personal details
Born (1965-05-23) 23 May 1965
Jyllinge, Denmark
Political partySocialist People's Party
(Before 2005)
Social Democrats
(2005–present)
Alma materAarhus University
Roskilde University

Education and civil career

Antorini was born in Jyllinge, near Copenhagen, where her mother was a teacher and her father a dairyman.[2] Her mother was of Swiss Italian descent and Antorini was brought up in the Catholic faith.[3]

She studied political science at Århus University 1985-1987 and public administration at Roskilde University 1989-1994, obtaining a Candidate degree.[2]

She headed the secretariat of an independent office for consumer information 1999-2003, was anchorwoman in Danish Radio 2003-2004 and worked for the Union of Commercial and Clerical Employees, part of Danish Confederation of Trade Unions, 2004-2005.[2]

Political career

Antorini was a member of the executive board of the Youth of the Socialist People's Party became a member of the executive board for the Socialist People's Party in 1988. In 1991, she became deputy leader for the party, a position she held to 1998. From 1998 to 1999 she was a member of the Folketing for the Socialist People's Party from Eastern Copenhagen electoral district.[2]

She was elected again to the Folketing in the general election, 2005, this time representing the Social Democrats and subsequently re-elected in the 2007 election and the 2011 election. She was among other things the Social Democrats' spokesperson on education. The 2011 election brought the Social Democrats to power in a coalition cabinet led by Helle Thorning-Schmidt. Antorini was named Minister of Children and Education 3 October 2011, with the inclusion of children in the Minister of Education's portfolio being a novelty. In a cabinet reshuffle on 9 August 2013, the position was again called Minister of Education.[2]

She has been a member of a number of committees, boards and think-thanks; several related to education and science.[2]

Christine Antorini was one of two Danish nominees for EU Commissioner in August 2014.[4]

Personal life

Antorini is twice divorced. She has two children from her first marriage. Her second marriage was to sociologist Henrik Dahl.[1][3]

Publications

  • Borgerlige ord efter revolutionen (co-author), Gyldendal, 1999
  • Det ny systemskifte, Gyldendal, 2001 (co-author),
  • Fanatisme eller Idealisme, Forum, 2003,
  • Epostler (co-author), Gyldendal, 2003
  • Fremtidens partier, Gyldendal, 2008.
gollark: One day I'm going to figure out some way to properly defragment these stupid drives... they're used SO inefficiently right now.
gollark: Anyway, I think the SSD was my inspiration for the massively scaled-down version running my systems.
gollark: Madness.
gollark: See, the 7 drives there in a pillar are quite uncool, since there are few of them and the lights do not change much.
gollark: Because walking through a room of blinky lights is cool.

References

  1. Christine Antorini (in Danish) Den Store Danske. Retrieved 21 July 2014
  2. Biography on the website of the Danish Parliament (Folketinget). Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  3. Det religiøse er højpotent(in Danish) Kristeligt Dagblad. Retrieved 21 July 2014 ( at WebCite)
  4. http://www.europeanvoice.com/article/denmark-puts-forward-two-names-for-the-european-commission/
Political offices
Preceded by
Troels Lund Poulsen
Minister of Education
2011–2015
Succeeded by
Ellen Trane Nørby
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.