Maria Robsahm

Maria Robsahm (before June 2008 Maria Carlshamre; born Maria Kelldén on 3 February 1957 in Enköping) is a Swedish politician and was a Member of the European Parliament from 2004 to 2009. She was elected as a member of the Liberal People's Party, part of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. However, she defected to Feminist Initiative on 1 March 2006.[1]

She sat on the European Parliament's Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs and the Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality. She was also a substitute for the Committee on Culture and Education and a member of the Delegation to the EU-Moldova Parliamentary Cooperation Committee.

Robsahm was convicted of accounting irregularities in August 2005, following the bankruptcy of a company owned jointly by herself (then known as Maria Carlshamre) and her former husband. She was given a suspended sentence.[2] As a result of her conviction, the leadership of the Liberal People's Party called on her to resign from her seat in the European Parliament. Instead, she left that party and joined Feminist Initiative. This move received some Swedish media attention for the fact that one of the two co-leaders of Feminist Initiative, Gudrun Schyman, had been convicted on another finance-related crime, tax evasion.

Education

  • 1979: Bachelor's degree in philosophy
  • 1988–90: University diploma in journalism

Career

gollark: You can chat with it *and* talk to the NSA and every other three-letter agency at the same time!
gollark: I tell my friends to use Signal, but they ignore me like dodecahedra.
gollark: I think he just dislikes ~90% of CC programs.
gollark: When it gets back up, I'm going to download potatOS from it and start hosting it off osmarks.tk or something.
gollark: Pastebin is seemingly down or not really working now, so ~90% of CC programs are now inaccessible.

See also

Notes

  1. Convicted Liberal defects to feminists Archived 2011-06-05 at the Wayback Machine, The Local, March 1, 2006 (in English)
  2. Carlshamre dömd för bokföringsbrott, Dagens Nyheter, October 14, 2005 (in Swedish)


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