Håkan Juholt facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Håkan Juholt
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Håkan Juholt in March 2011
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Ambassador to the Republic of South Africa | |
Assumed office September 2020 |
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Prime Minister | Stefan Löfven Ulf Kristersson |
Preceded by | Cecilia Julin |
Ambassador to the Republic of Iceland | |
In office 1 September 2017 – 31 August 2020 |
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Prime Minister | Stefan Löfven |
Preceded by | Bosse Hedberg |
Succeeded by | Pär Ahlberger |
Leader of the Social Democratic Party | |
In office 25 March 2011 – 21 January 2012 |
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Preceded by | Mona Sahlin |
Succeeded by | Stefan Löfven |
Member of the Riksdag | |
In office 3 October 1994 – 11 September 2016 |
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Constituency | Kalmar County |
Personal details | |
Born | Oskarshamn, Sweden |
16 September 1962
Political party | Social Democrats |
Spouses | Anneli Juholt (divorced) Åsa Lindgren (m. 2014-present) |
Children | 2 |
Alma mater | Södertornskolan |
Profession | Journalist Photographer |
Håkan Juholt (born 16 September 1962) is a Swedish politician who was Leader of the Social Democrats from 2011 to 2012. He was member of the Swedish parliament from 1994 to 2016, representing Kalmar län. Juholt served as Sweden's Ambassador to the Republic of Iceland from September 2017 to August 2020, and has served as Ambassador to the Republic of South Africa since September 2020.
Early life and career
He is a native of Oskarshamn, a town of 17,000 on the Baltic Sea and the site of a nuclear power plant. His father worked in Oskarshamn as a printer and was a union man. His maternal grandfather was the artist Arvid Källström (1893–1967). After finishing gymnasium, he was hired in 1980 as a photographer and journalist for the Social Democratic Kalmar newspaper Östra Småland (Östran), where he is still formally employed but on leave since elected to parliament in 1994. In the early 1980s, he reported for the newspaper from the Solidarity movement in Poland.
Political career
From 1984 to 1990 he was a board member of the Swedish Social Democratic Youth League (SSU). In 1994 he was elected to parliament. In 2004 he was appointed assistant party secretary. In the spring of 2009 he temporarily was the party secretary after Marita Ulvskog resigned and before Ibrahim Baylan took over. Until he became party leader, he was regional chairman of the Social Democrats of Kalmar län. He's chairman of the board for Oskarshamn's harbour, John Lindgren's peace fund, Tage Erlander's memorial fund and of the ownership board for the Östra Småland newspaper.
He was the party's spokesperson on defence policy. From 1995 he was a member of the joint parliament-government committee on defence policy (försvarsberedningen), and its chairman in 2000–2007. From 1996 to 2011, he was a member of the parliamentary committee on defence issues (försvarsutskottet), and served as its chairman 2010–2011. He was a delegate to the parliamentarian summits of NATO in 1995 and Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe in 1996.
Party chairman
After the Swedish parliamentary election in 2010, where the Social Democrats lost a significant number of votes, Håkan Juholt criticized the party's campaign. He described it as a popcorn pan, going in all directions. When Jytte Guteland, chairman of the party's youth league (SSU), called for the whole board to offer their resignation, he was the first to support her.
On 10 March 2011, he was proposed by the election committee led by Berit Andnor to succeed Mona Sahlin as the chairman of the party, with Carin Jämtin as the party secretary. Juholt's new leadership was elected during the Social Democratic Congress on 25 March 2011.
Legacy
After his resignation, he continued serving for a short while as MP, until becoming appointed as Sweden's ambassador to Iceland and later South Africa. The detailed circumstances regarding his short chairmanship of the Social Democratic party has been portrayed in a documentary film ("Partiledaren som klev ut ur kylan") by Tom Alandh. in turn based on the book Partiledaren som klev in i kylan by author Daniel Suhonen. The book in particular describes the events leading up to Juholt's resignation as an intricate coup carried out by the party elite with close support from leading financial establishments in Sweden, such as the Wallenberg oligarchal family. Suhonen's source material includes secret recordings from the party's politburo meetings.
See also
In Spanish: Håkan Juholt para niños