Alfonso Dastis Explained

Honorific Prefix:The Most Excellent
Alfonso Dastis
Office:Spanish Ambassador to Italy
Term Start:7 September 2018
Term End:11 October 2022
Predecessor:Jesús Gracia Aldaz
Successor:Miguel Ángel Fernández-Palacios
Office1:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Primeminister1:Mariano Rajoy
Term Start1:4 November 2016
Term End1:1 June 2018
Predecessor1:José Manuel García-Margallo
Successor1:Josep Borrell
Office4:Ambassador Permanent Representative of Spain to the European Union
Term Start4:21 December 2011
Term End4:4 November 2016
Predecessor4:Luis Planas
Successor4:Juan Pablo García-Berdoy
Office3:Ambassador of Spain to the Netherlands
Term Start3:26 June 2004
Term End3:31 December 2011
Predecessor3:Carlos Manuel de Benavides y Salas
Successor3:Juan Prat y Coll
Birth Name:Alfonso María Dastis Quecedo
Birth Date:5 October 1955
Birth Place:Jerez de la Frontera, Spain
Party:Independent
Alma Mater:CEU San Pablo University
Complutense University

Alfonso María Dastis Quecedo (born 5 October 1955) is a Spanish diplomat, who served as Minister of Foreign Affairs of Spain from 2016 until 1 June 2018, when a vote of no-confidence against Mariano Rajoy ousted the government. Prior to becoming Minister he held several positions within the Spanish Diplomatic Corps. Until 2022, he was the Ambassador of Spain to the Republic of Italy.[1]

Education

Dastis studied law at the CEU San Pablo University in the 1970s, then attended the public Complutense University of Madrid.[2] He embarked on a doctoral thesis on the freedom of establishment of insurance companies, but abandoned it in 1983.[2]

Career

Dastis entered the Diplomatic Corps in 1983.[2] As a career diplomat he held several positions linked to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and to international institutions, such as in the Spanish Embassy to the UN, the Minister's Staff, and the Prime Minister's Office. In 2002, he was named Secretary General for European Affairs.

Between 1987 and 1989, Dastis worked as a law clerk for one of his former professors, Gil Carlos Rodríguez Iglesias, Spain's first judge at the European Court of Justice (ECJ) and a subsequent president of that court.[2]

As Spain's legal adviser at the United Nations, Dastis deputised occasionally for Spain's ambassador in 1993-94 when Spain held a seat on the United Nations Security Council and cast Spain's vote at the Security Council meeting that accepted the Czech Republic and Slovakia as members after they had split.[2] Dastis was EU adviser to José Maria Aznar from 1996 to 2000. Among other things, he was in charge of organising Spain's presidency of the Council of the European Union, which ran in the first half of 2002.[2] At the end of 2001, Aznar nominated him as Spanish delegate to the Convention on the Future of Europe, alongside Ana de Palacio y del Valle-Lersundi. In this capacity, he pushed against making the Union's common foreign and security policy (CFSP) subject to the jurisdiction of the ECJ.[3]

Dastis attained the rank of Ambassador in 2004 being named Ambassador to the Netherlands. In 2011 Dastis was named Permanent Representative to the European Union. In 2016 Dastis was named Minister of Foreign Affairs in the second Rajoy government.

During the 2017-18 Spanish constitutional crisis, Dastis claimed in an interview with BBC News that several videos purporting to show clashes during the 1 October Catalan independence referendum were fake, and defended the actions of the Civil Guard and National Police.[4] [5]

Personal life

Dastis is married to a lawyer. He is a keen golfer.[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: El Gobierno aprueba el nombramiento de Dastis como embajador en Italia y nombra a Santiago Cabanas para Washington . es . 7 September 2018 . 11 July 2019 . . Madrid.
  2. News: Nicholas . Hirst . February 19, 2014 . Alfonso Dastis Quecedo – Thoughtful Andalusian . . 11 July 2019.
  3. News: Dana . Spinant . March 12, 2003 . Split over powers for Court . . 11 July 2019.
  4. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/10/22/spanish-minister-says-videos-police-violence-fake-news/ Spanish minister: police violence videos against Catalonia referendum supporters are 'fake news
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uniLrxwDAOQ Spain FM: 'Many police violence pictures fake' - BBC News