Difference between revisions of "Konstantinos Mitsotakis"

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}}'''Konstantinos Mitsotakis''' was a Greek politician who was [[Prime Minister of Greece]] from 1990 to 1993. His son, [[Kyriakos Mitsotakis]], was elected as the Prime Minister of Greece following the 2019 Greek legislative election.  
 
 
'''Konstantinos Mitsotakis''' was a Greek politician who was Prime Minister of Greece from 1990 to 1993. His son, [[Kyriakos Mitsotakis]], was elected as the Prime Minister of Greece following the 2019 Greek legislative election.  
 
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==

Latest revision as of 14:16, 1 August 2022

Person.png Konstantinos Mitsotakis  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(politician)
Mitsotakis 1992.jpg
Born18 October 1918
Halepa, Greece
Died29 May 2017 (Age 98)
Athens, Greece
NationalityGreek
Alma materUniversity of Athens
ChildrenAlexandra Mitsotaki
SpouseMarika Mitsotakis
Member ofUS/Department/State/International Visitor Leadership Program
PartyLiberal Party (Greece), Centre Union (Greece), Independent, New Liberal (Greece), New Democracy (Greece)
Attended the 1993 Bilderberg as Prime Minister of Greece

Employment.png Prime Minister of Greece Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
11 April 1990 - 13 October 1993
Succeeded byAndreas Papandreou

Employment.png Greece/Minister of Foreign Affairs

In office
14 April 1992 - 7 August 1992

Employment.png Greece/Minister of Foreign Affairs

In office
10 May 1980 - 21 October 1981

Employment.png Greece/Minister of the Aegean

In office
8 August 1991 - 13 October 1993

Employment.png Greece/Minister of Coordination

In office
10 May 1978 - 10 May 1980

Employment.png Greece/Minister of Coordination

In office
17 September 1965 - 22 December 1966

Konstantinos Mitsotakis was a Greek politician who was Prime Minister of Greece from 1990 to 1993. His son, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, was elected as the Prime Minister of Greece following the 2019 Greek legislative election.

Background

Mitsotakis was born on Crete into a powerful political family, linked on both sides to Eleftherios Venizelos.

Career

Mitsotakis was elected to the Greek Parliament for the first time in 1946, standing for the Liberal Party. He followed most of the old Liberal Party into Georgios Papandreou's Center Union in 1961. But King Constantine II openly opposed Papandreou's progressive government, and in 1965 he engineered a split in the Centre Union. Mitsotakis led a Centre Union faction, known as the "July apostates", who crossed the floor to bring about the fall of Papandreou's s government, which earned him the long-time hatred of Papandreou loyalists as well as a significant part of the Greek left.

Arrest and exile

Mitsotakis was arrested in 1967 by the military junta but managed to escape to Turkey with a help of Turkish foreign minister İhsan Sabri Çağlayangil and lived in exile with his family in Paris, France, until his return to Greece in 1974.

1990 - PM

When he became PM in 1990 for the New Democracy (ND) party, his government moved swiftly to cut government spending as much as possible, privatize state enterprises and reform the civil service. In foreign policy, Mitsotakis took the initiative to have Greece formally recognize the state of Israel, and moved to reopen talks on American bases in Greece and to restore confidence among Greece's economic and political partners (big banks and the United States/NATO).

In June 1990, Mitsotakis became the first Greek Premier to visit the US since 1974. He promised to meet Greece's NATO obligations, to prevent use of Greece as a base for "terrorism" (change the policy away from Palestinians and the Arab countries), and to stop the rhetorical attacks on the United States that had been Papandreou's hallmark. Mitsotakis also supported a new dialogue with Turkey, but made progress on the Cyprus dispute a prerequisite for improvement on other issues.

Resignation

Mitsotakis resigned after a 1993 premature election.


 

Event Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/199322 April 199325 April 1993Greece
Nafsika Astir Palace Hotel
Vouliagmeni
The 41st Bilderberg, held in Greece
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References