Office: | Minister for Foreign Affairs |
Term Start: | 6 December 2021 |
Chancellor: | Karl Nehammer |
Predecessor: | Michael Linhart |
Term Start1: | 3 June 2019 |
Term End1: | 11 October 2021 |
Chancellor1: | Brigitte Bierlein Sebastian Kurz |
Predecessor1: | Karin Kneissl |
Successor1: | Michael Linhart |
Office2: | Chancellor of Austria |
Term Start2: | 11 October 2021 |
Term End2: | 6 December 2021 |
President2: | Alexander Van der Bellen |
1Namedata2: | Werner Kogler |
Predecessor2: | Sebastian Kurz |
Successor2: | Karl Nehammer |
Office3: | Minister of the Chancellery |
Alongside3: | Ines Stilling |
Chancellor3: | Brigitte Bierlein |
Term Start3: | 6 June 2019 |
Term End3: | 7 January 2020 |
Predecessor3: | Gernot Blümel Juliane Bogner-Strauß |
Successor3: | Christine Aschbacher Karoline Edtstadler Susanne Raab |
Birth Date: | 20 June 1969 |
Birth Place: | Bern, Switzerland |
Spouse: | (divorced) |
Children: | 4 |
Party: | People's Party (2020–present) |
Otherparty: | Independent (before 2020) |
Education: | University of Vienna Panthéon-Assas University College of Europe |
Father: | Wolfgang Schallenberg |
Alexander Georg Nicolas Schallenberg (pronounced as /de/; born 20 June 1969) is an Austrian diplomat, jurist, and politician who has served as Minister for Foreign Affairs in the government of Chancellor Karl Nehammer since 2021, previously holding the office from 2019 to 2021. A member of the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), he held the position in the second government of Sebastian Kurz, before briefly serving as Chancellor of Austria as Kurz's successor from 11 October to 6 December 2021.
A member of the Schallenberg family and a graduate of the College of Europe, Schallenberg was a career diplomat who became a mentor to Kurz when the latter became foreign minister. Kurz appointed him director of strategic foreign policy planning and head of the European department. Schallenberg joined the cabinet as foreign minister in 2019. After Kurz announced his pending resignation on 9 October 2021, Schallenberg was proposed by the ÖVP to replace him as Chancellor of Austria.[1] He was sworn in on 11 October 2021.[2] Schallenberg announced his pending resignation on 2 December 2021, after less than two months in office. His resignation took effect on 6 December; he returned to the position of foreign minister.
See main article: Schallenberg family.
A member of the comital branch of the Austro-Hungarian Schallenberg family, Schallenberg was born in 1969 in Bern, Switzerland, where his father Wolfgang was Austrian ambassador to Switzerland.[3] His mother is a native of Switzerland, and the daughter of Swiss banker and president of UBS Alfred Schaefer.[4] Schallenberg was raised in India, Spain and France where his father served as ambassador; his father eventually became Secretary-General of the Foreign Ministry.[3] Schallenberg speaks German, French, English and Spanish fluently, and has basic knowledge of Russian.[5] [6] [7] The Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels lists his given names as Alexander Georg Nicolas Christoph Wolfgang Tassilo,[8] though Schallenberg has disputed this and listed Alexander Georg Nicolas as his given names.[9]
His paternal grandfather, Herbert, Count of Schallenberg (1901–1974), was Austrian consul general in Prague,[10] [11] while his paternal grandmother was the daughter of politician Walter Koch, the Saxon and later German ambassador in Prague. He is a 2nd great-grandson of Austro-Hungarian general Karl Kostersitz von Marenhorst. Schallenberg has mainly Swiss ancestry on his mother's side and Austrian, Bohemian, Moravian, Hungarian and Saxon ancestry on his father's side. Alexander Schallenberg's traditional title is Count,[12] the hereditary title his family was conferred in 1666 within the Habsburg Hereditary Lands. He is the first chancellor since Kurt Schuschnigg and Prince Starhemberg to belong to a noble family.[13] [14]
Schallenberg married French–Belgian European civil servant and fellow graduate of the College of Europe Marie-Isabelle Hénin (born 1969 in Uccle) in Saint-Pierre, France in 1995. She is the daughter of Erik Hénin and noted equestrian and 1960s Parisian socialite Isabelle Le Maresquier, and a granddaughter of the prominent French architect Noël Le Maresquier and Spanish noblewoman Conchita López de Tejada; Isabelle Le Maresquier was a niece of French prime minister Michel Debré. Her family was discussed as an example of French "state nobility" by Pierre Bourdieu.[15]
Alexander and Marie-Isabelle Schallenberg have four children; they later divorced.[16]
From 1989 to 1994, he studied law at the University of Vienna and the University of Paris II Panthéon-Assas. From 1995 to 1996 he earned an LL.M. in European law at the College of Europe in Bruges, Belgium,[17] an institution that aims "to train an elite of young executives for Europe"[18] and whose graduates are said to form a close-knit "Bruges Mafia."[19] Schallenberg was a graduate of the "Walter Hallstein promotion."[20]
In 1997, Schallenberg joined the Austrian diplomatic service.[21] From 2000 to 2005, he worked at the permanent representation of Austria to the European Union in Brussels, where he headed the legal department. In 2006, he became a press spokesman to Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik, a fellow College of Europe graduate. When Sebastian Kurz became foreign minister, Schallenberg was appointed as director of strategic foreign policy planning in 2013. Originally he was scheduled to become ambassador to India in 2014, but he chose to remain at the foreign ministry to work with the new foreign minister. Schallenberg was widely seen as a mentor to the inexperienced Kurz who knew little of foreign policy, who in turn promoted him to senior posts.[22] In 2016 Schallenberg became head of the European department of the foreign ministry.[23]
On 3 June 2019, Schallenberg succeeded Karin Kneissl as foreign minister of Austria.[24] He maintained his position as part of the second Kurz cabinet, which was sworn in on 7 January 2020. He stepped down when he became chancellor, but returned to the position following his resignation.[25]
See also: Schallenberg government. After Kurz announced his pending resignation on 9 October 2021 as a result of the Kurz corruption probe, Schallenberg was proposed by the ÖVP to replace him as chancellor of Austria.[1]
Schallenberg was sworn in as chancellor on 11 October 2021 by President Alexander Van der Bellen.[26] In his first official act, he nominated career diplomat and ambassador to France Michael Linhart to succeed him as foreign minister.[27]
In November 2021, Schallenberg announced that COVID-19 vaccines would be mandatory in Austria from February 2022. It became the first European country to mandate the vaccine.[28]
Schallenberg announced his resignation on 2 December 2021 following Kurz's announcement that he was leaving politics just a few hours prior. As his reason for stepping down, he cited his belief that the chancellor and party leader should be the same person.[29]
On 9 October 2023, Schallenberg announced the suspension of the delivery of 19 million euros ($20 million) of aid to Palestinian areas in response to Hamas's attack on Israel and said that it would review its existing projects in Palestine. He also said that he would summon the Iranian ambassador to address Iran's "abhorrent reactions" to the attack.[30]
Since 2020, Schallenberg has been a trustee of the National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism.[33]