Kalevi Sorsa

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Person.png Kalevi Sorsa   Alchetron Amazon C-SPAN Dbpedia Geni IMDB WikidataRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
politician)
Kalevi-Sorsa-1975 (cropped).jpg
Born1930-12-21
 Keuruu,  Finland
Died2004-01-16 (Age 73)
 Helsinki,  Finland
Nationality Finnish
Alma mater University of Tampere
PartyProperty "Has politicalParty" (as page type) with input value "Social Democratic Party of Finland|Social Democratic Party of Finland" contains invalid characters or is incomplete and therefore can cause unexpected results during a query or annotation process.[[Social Democratic Party of Finland|“Social Democratic Party of Finland”]]
Prime minister of Finland three times between 1972 and 1987.

Employment.png Finland/Minister/Foreign Affairs

In office
30 April 1987 - 31 January 1989

Employment.png Finland/Prime Minister/Deputy Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
30 April 1987 - 31 January 1989

Employment.png Prime Minister of Finland

In office
19 February 1982 - 30 April 1987

Employment.png Prime Minister of Finland

In office
15 May 1977 - 26 May 1979
Succeeded byMauno Koivisto

Employment.png Finland/Prime Minister/Deputy Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
30 November 1975 - 29 September 1976

Employment.png Finland/Minister/Foreign Affairs

In office
30 November 1975 - 29 September 1976

Employment.png Prime Minister of Finland

In office
4 September 1972 - 13 June 1975

Employment.png Finland/Minister/Foreign Affairs

In office
23 February 1972 - 4 September 1972

Kalevi Sorsa was prime minister of Finland three times between 1972 and 1987. He attended the 1990 Bilderberg meeting, shortly before Finland in 1992 started to negotiate to join the EU. He also participated in the EU membership referendum campaign.

Background

Kalevi Sorsa was born on December 21, 1930. The father's job forced the family to move around the country. In addition to school, Kalevi Sorsa did forestry work. His literary hobbies led him to become an intern at a newspaper, and in 1949 he began studying journalism. In 1957, Sorsa graduated with a degree in journalism. He financed his studies by working as a journalist. In 1963, Kalevi Sorsa obtained a bachelor's degree in social sciences from the University of Tampere with a specialization in Finnish literature.[1]

Early career

From 1959 to 1965, Kalevi Sorsa moved to Paris with his wife Irene to become an official at UNESCO. The time spent in Paris was a very important period for Sorsa: he got to know the French language and culture well, got to know French politicians and made lifelong friendships. While living in France, Kalevi Sorsa distanced himself from Finnish domestic politics and stayed away from the internal conflicts of the Social Democratic Party of Finland. From Paris, Kalevi Sorsa returned to Finland to become the Secretary General of the Finnish Commission of UNESCO and the deputy director of the department of international affairs of the Ministry of Education.

Politics

In 1969, he was brought in from relative obscurity by Rafael Paasio, a former Prime Minister of Finland, to assume the influential post of party secretary, despite not having much experience of national politics.

Sorsa was a leading political figure during the presidencies of Kekkonen and Koivisto.[2] He was the chairman of the Social Democratic Party from 1975 to 1987 and Prime Minister of Finland in four centre-left coalitions for a total of ten years (1972–1975,[3] 1977–1979,[4] 1982–1983,[5] 1983–1987[6]). He remains Finland's longest-sitting prime minister.

After his premiership he was the Speaker of the Finnish Parliament from 1989 to 1991. During his career he also twice was Deputy Prime Minister, from 1975 to 1976 and from 1987 to 1989.[7] From 1987 to 1996, Sorsa sat on the governing board of the Bank of Finland.[8][2] He was also known for his participation as the convener in the economic policy seminar at Hotel Korpilampi in Lahnus, Espoo, in September 1977.[9][10]

Sorsa supported the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe after its creation in 1975. In the 1970s he championed a free-trade agreement with the European Economic Community (EEC), which boosted ties between Finland and the countries of Western Europe.

Sorsa was also active in the international social democratic movement, and in the mid-1970s was elected vice-president of the Socialist International. In the late 1970s and in the 1980s the Socialist International had extensive contacts and discussion with the two leading powers of the Cold War period, the United States and the Soviet Union, on issues concerning East–West relations, arms control and Afghanistan.[11] The Socialist International supported détente and disarmament agreements, such as SALT II, START and INF. They had several meetings and discussion in Washington, D.C., with President Jimmy Carter and Vice-President George Bush and with CPSU Secretaries General Leonid Brezhnev and Mikhail Gorbachev in Moscow. Sorsa led the Socialist International's delegations to these discussions.[12]

Stasi allegation

Finnish former diplomat Alpo Rusi alleged that Kalevi Sorsa was on a secret list of 18 high-profile Finns with links to the Stasi, East Germany's intelligence agency. West German intelligence handed the file to its Finnish counterpart in 1990, but the Finnish Supreme Court ruled that the list must not be made public.[13] It is unclear to what extent this contact actually existed was, or whether the list was an attempt at casting aspersions similar to the Mitrokhin archives.



 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/199010 May 199013 May 1990New York
US
Glen Cove
38th Bilderberg meeting, 119 guests
WEF/Annual Meeting/1983January 1983January 1983Switzerland
WEF
By 1983, the European Management Symposium had become, as Klaus Schwab put it in his opening address, "the foremost annual gathering of decision-makers of the world economy."
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References

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