Danuta Hübner | |
Honorific-Suffix: | MEP |
Office: | Chair of the European Parliament Constitutional Affairs Committee |
Term Start: | 7 July 2014 |
Predecessor: | Carlo Casini |
Office1: | Member of the European Parliament |
Term Start1: | 7 June 2009 |
Constituency1: | Poland |
Office2: | European Commissioner for Regional Policy |
President2: | José Manuel Barroso |
Term Start2: | 22 November 2004 |
Term End2: | 4 July 2009 |
Predecessor2: | Jacques Barrot |
Successor2: | Paweł Samecki |
Office3: | European Commissioner for Trade |
President3: | Romano Prodi |
Term Start3: | 1 May 2004 |
Term End3: | 22 November 2004 Served with Pascal Lamy |
Predecessor3: | Pascal Lamy |
Successor3: | Peter Mandelson |
Birth Name: | Danuta Hübner |
Birth Date: | 8 April 1948 |
Birth Place: | Nisko, Poland |
Nationality: | Polish |
Party: | Civic Platform (since 2004) Polish United Workers' Party (1970-1987) |
Otherparty: | Poland
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Alma Mater: | Warsaw School of Economics |
Danuta Maria Hübner (pronounced as /pol/ or pronounced as /pol/; born 8 April 1948) is a Polish politician and Diplomat and Economist and Member of the European Parliament. She has served as European Commissioner for Regional Policy from 22 November 2004 until 4 July 2009, when she resigned to become a Member of European Parliament for the Civic Platform.[1] In 2012, Professor Hübner became a member of the International Honorary Council[2] of the European Academy of Diplomacy.
Hübner received her MSc in Economics, SGH Warsaw School of Economics (Central School of Planning and Statistics) in 1971, her PhD in economics, SGH Warsaw School of Economics 1974 Visiting scholar at the Centre for European Studies at the University of Sussex in 1974, and her post-doctoral degree in international trade relations, SGH Warsaw School of Economics in 1980.
Hübner was a 1988–1990 Fulbright scholar at the University of California, Berkeley and received an honorary Degree in Laws of Sussex University in 2005.[3]
In the 1970s Hübner was a visiting scholar at Universidad Autonoma in Madrid. Since 1971 she has been a professor at the Warsaw School of Economics.
For 1981–1987 she was Deputy Director of the Research Institute for Developing Countries, Warsaw School of Economics.She has been a full Professor, Warsaw School of Economics, since 1992, currently on leave.For 1991–1994 she was Deputy Director, Institute for Development and Strategic Studies, Warsaw.[4]
For 1991–1997 Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the Ekonomista, a Polish bi-monthly, and for 1994–1997 she was Editor-in-Chief of Gospodarka Narodowa, a Polish economics monthly.
From 2001 until 2003, Hübner was the Head of Office of the Committee for European Integration and Secretary of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
From 2003 until 2004, Hübner served as Minister for European Affairs in the government of Prime Minister Leszek Miller. In this capacity, she was the representative of the Government of Poland to the Convention on the Future of Europe.
From 1 May 2004, Hübner was a Member of the European Commission. At the time of her nomination by Prime Minister of Poland Leszek Miller, her main competitor was fellow Convention member and former Prime Minister Józef Oleksy.[6]
In November 2004, Hübner was appointed Commissioner for Regional Policy in the European Commission led by President José Manuel Barroso. In this capacity, she represented the Commission at the funeral of Pope John Paul II in 2005.
Between 2006 and 2007, Hübner served as member of the Amato Group, a group of high-level European politicians unofficially working on rewriting the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe into what became known as the Treaty of Lisbon following its rejection by French and Dutch voters.
Since the 2009 European elections, Hübner has been a Member of the European Parliament for Poland, representing the Warsaw Constituency (from Civic Platform). In 2011, she was awarded the Emperor-Maximilian-Prize.
From 2009 until 2014, Hübner served as chairwoman of the Committee on Regional Development. Since 2014, she has been chairing the Committee on Constitutional Affairs. She also serves on the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs and on the five-member Advisory Committee on the Conduct of Members, the parliament’s body responsible for assessing alleged breaches of its code of conduct and advising the President of the European Parliament on possible action to be taken,[7]
In addition to her committee assignments, Hübner has been a member of the Parliament's delegation for relations with the United States since 2009. On 15 September 2010 she joined the Spinelli Group in the European Parliament, which was founded to reinvigorate the strive for federalisation of the EU; other prominent supporters included Jacques Delors, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Guy Verhofstadt, Andrew Duff, Elmar Brok. She is also a member of the European Parliament Intergroup on Sports.[8] From 2014 until 2019, she was a member of the European Parliament's Advisory Committee on the Conduct of Members.[9] [10]
In 2015, Hübner was one of the Parliament's two rapporteurs (alongside Jo Leinen) on a set of proposed changes to EU electoral law that sought to regularize a variety of different electoral systems across the EU.[11] Since 2017, she has been serving on the Parliament's so-called Brexit Steering Group, which works under the aegis of the Conference of Presidents and to coordinates Parliament's deliberations, considerations and resolutions on the UK's withdrawal from the EU.[12]
In November 2017, Hübner joined a parliamentary majority by voting in favor of a resolution invoking Article 7 of the Treaty on European Union, thereby potentially stripping Poland of voting rights in the EU for violating the common values of the bloc, including the rule of law.[17] Shortly after, her political opponents had pictures of Hübner and five other Polish politicians strung from a makeshift gallows in a public square in Katowice.[17]
Speaking in July 2017 with respect to Brexit negotiations, Hübner has said the process cannot be about "cherry-picking".[18] She has said that it is "important to understand what the UK wants". She has said that they have heard the UK say "no customs union, no single market". She has said that she hopes the negotiation will be a "learning process" for the UK and that these stances will change.[18] Hübner said she was "totally disappointed" with the Brexit decision and said that she felt there was a "lack of understanding of the consequences" of Brexit.[18]
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