Jana Bobošíková
Jana Bobošíková | |
---|---|
Member of the European Parliament for the Czech Republic | |
In office 20 July 2004 – 13 July 2009 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Prague, Czechoslovakia | 29 August 1964
Political party | Sovereignty – Jana Bobošíková Bloc |
Other political affiliations | Independents (formerly) Politika 21 (formerly) Party of Common Sense (formerly) |
Spouse | Pavel Bobošík |
Children | 2 |
Alma mater | University of Economics |
Profession | Politician, Journalist |
Jana Bobošíková (born 29 August 1964) is a Czech politician. In the 2004 European Parliament election she was elected a Member of the European Parliament for the Independents and remained unaffiliated in the European Parliament. In the 2008 and 2013 presidential elections she unsuccessfully ran for the office as President of the Czech Republic. She founded Politika 21 in 2006 and Sovereignty – Jana Bobošíková Bloc in 2009.
Early life
[edit]She was a member of the Socialist Union of Youth. In 2012, Czech media noticed that in a TV news report from June 1986, she passed a bouquet of roses to President Gustáv Husák, the Secretary-General of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.[1] She later told Czech Television that it had been "an honor".[2][a]
In 1987 she graduated with a master's degree in economics.
Career
[edit]From 1989, Bobošíková presented TV programmes on politics and economics, spending most of her television career at Česká Televize (ČT). She was appointed Head of News in late 2000, and played a significant role in the Czech TV crisis of January 2001, following which she resigned from ČT and moved to TV Nova, where she worked until 2004.
She had already been an adviser to the chair of the Chamber of Deputies from 1999,[3] and continued her move into politics in 2004 by standing for the European Parliament, elected on the Independents ticket. She was a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) until 2009. She sat on the Committee on Regional Development, was a substitute for the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs, and a member of the Delegation to the EU-Ukraine Parliamentary Cooperation Committee.
In 2009, she began cooperating with the Party of Common Sense. She led this electoral alliance in the 2009 European election under the name 'Sovereignty'; the list came fifth, winning 4.3% of the vote, just short of the 5% threshold for representation. In 2011, she established her own party, Sovereignty – Jana Bobošíková Bloc.
Bobošíková ran in the Czech presidential election in 2008 and 2013. In the first round of the 2013 election, she placed 9th with 2.39% (123,171 votes),[4] and did not qualify for the second round.
References
[edit]- ^ Tichý, Oldřich (5 October 2012). "Svazačka Bobo vítala Husáka: Kvůli uniformě má z ostudy kabát" (in Czech). Blesk. Retrieved 3 January 2013.
- ^ a b "Bobošíková v ČT: Na kytici pro Husáka jsem hrdá. A antikomunistům se směji" (in Czech). Parlamentní listy. 18 December 2012. Retrieved 3 January 2013.
- ^ PSP Archived 26 April 2005 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Volba prezidenta republiky konaná ve dnech 11.01. – 12.01.2013" (in Czech). volby.cz. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
Notes
[edit]External links
[edit]- Official website
- Official YouTube Channel of Jana Bobošíková
- Suverenita's Web page
- Jana Bobošíková passing a bouquet of roses to Secretary General of KSČ comrade Gustáv Husák.
- Personal profile of Jana Bobošíková in the European Parliament's database of members
- Declaration (PDF) of financial interests (in Czech)
- 1964 births
- Living people
- Independent Democrats (Czech Republic) MEPs
- MEPs for the Czech Republic 2004–2009
- Women MEPs for the Czech Republic
- Prague University of Economics and Business alumni
- Politicians from Prague
- Leaders of political parties
- Czech eurosceptics
- Czech critics of Islam
- Candidates in the 2008 Czech presidential election
- Candidates in the 2013 Czech presidential election
- Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia presidential candidates
- Female candidates for President of the Czech Republic
- Czech Television people