Kristina Háfoss Explained

Kristina Háfoss
Order:Secretary-General of the Nordic Council
Term Start:1 February 2021
Predecessor:Britt Bohlin Olsson
Order1:Minister of Finance
Primeminister1:Aksel V. Johannesen
Term Start1:15 September 2015
Term End1:16 September 2019
Predecessor1:Jørgen Niclasen
Successor1:Jørgen Niclasen
Order2:Member of Parliament
Term Start2:29 October 2011
Term End2:31 January 2021
Constituency2:Faroe Islands
Order3:Minister of Culture
Term Start3:4 February 2008
Term End3:30 August 2008
Primeminister3:Jóannes Eidesgaard
Predecessor3:Jógvan á Lakjuni
Successor3:Óluva Klettskarð
Order4:Member of Parliament
Term Start4:30 April 2002
Term End4:20 January 2004
Constituency4:Suðurstreymoy
Birth Name:Kristina Danielsen
Birth Date:26 June 1975
Birth Place:Copenhagen, Denmark
Party:Republic
Spouse:Ronnie Háfoss[1]
Children:4

Kristina Háfoss (born Danielsen; 26 June 1975)[2] is a Faroese economist, lawyer, politician (Tjóðveldi)[3] and former national swimmer for the Faroe Islands. She was Minister of Finance of the Faroe Islands from 2015–2019. She was elected for the Løgting again in 2019, but took leave from 1 February 2021 when she started in her new job as the Secretary-General of the Nordic Council.[4]

Background

She lived in Copenhagen for the first four years of her life, while her father was studying and her mother was working. After that she grew up in the Faroe Islands, mostly in Argir, which today has grown together with Tórshavn. She is the daughter of John P. Danielsen from Klaksvík and Anna Helena Danielsen (born Zachariasen) from Tórshavn. Her grandfather on her mother's side was Louis Zachariasen from Kirkja on the small island Fugloy. He was a teacher but stopped teaching when he could not teach the children in the Faroese language.[5] He was a politician for the Home Rule Party.

Háfoss was a competition swimmer when she was a child and teenager, she swam for the local club in Tórshavn, Havnar Svimjifelag and for the Faroe Islands. The swimming brought her together with another Faroese swimmer, Annika Olsen, who also became a politician later, they became friends at a young age and both were swimming for the Faroe Islands national team.[2] After stopping her swimming career while attending high school in Hoydalar, she began playing volleyball on club level.

Háfoss has degrees as Candidate of Law (Cand.jur.) from 2002 and economics (Cand.polit.) from 2003, both degrees taken from the University of Copenhagen. Háfoss was employed by the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs 1998–1999, by the Ministry of Finance 1999–2000 and by the Prime Ministers Office in the Faroe Islands in the summer periods of 1999 and 2000.[6] She was economical advisor under the work of Action Plan for the outlying islands of the Faroes (in Faroese called Útoyggjar, the small islands which have very small populations and are not connected to the main area of the Faroes) 2000–2001, she worked as an economist in the Landsbanki Føroya 2004–2005 and Project Manager and investment advisor in Føroya Banki in 2006.[3] From 2007 until 2011 she was the Head of Department at The Faroe Insurance Company.[3]

Political career

Háfoss was deputy president of the næstformand i the Voters Union (Valfelag) of Suðurstreymoyar Tjóðveldisfelag 2001–2002. She was elected to the Løgting from South Streymoy 2002–2004, she was member of Republic's Tjóðveldisflokkurins working committee 2004–2005.[3] In February 2008 she became Minister of Culture in the second cabinet of Jóannes Eidesgaard, but withdraw from the position for personal reasons a half year later. On 29 October 2011 she was again elected to the Faroese parliament with 451 personal votes which was second most on the Tjóðveldi list, next after Høgni Hoydal.[7]

Member of standing committees of the Løgting

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Um Kristinu (About Kristina). Kristinahafoss.fo. Faroese. 29 August 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160307072158/http://kristinahafoss.fo/?page_id=48. 7 March 2016.
  2. Web site: Svimjingin knýtti Kristinu og Anniku saman. Simonsen. Heri. 7 February 2016. in.fo (Rás2/Sosialurin). Faroese. 7 February 2016. 8 February 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160208083734/http://www.in.fo/news-detail/news/svimjingin-knytti-kristinu-og-anniku-saman/?L=&cHash=449c3ad6dec46c3c3b82053991d3f07c. dead.
  3. Web site: Kristina Háfoss | Tjóðveldi . tjodveldi.fo. 29 August 2015.
  4. Web site: Kristina Háfoss from the Faroe Islands chosen as new Secretary General of Nordic Council . 14 December 2020 . norden.org . Nordic Council . 15 December 2020.
  5. Web site: Louis Zachariasen | Gyldendal - Den Store Danske . denstoredanske.dk. 29 August 2015.
  6. http://logting.elektron.fo/Tingmenn/Tingmenn2002-2004/KristinaHafoss.htm logting.elektron.fo
  7. Web site: Val 11. Kringvarp Føroya. Faroese. 29 August 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150923060548/http://kvf.fo/val/l2011. 23 September 2015.
  8. Web site: Løgtingið . logting.fo . 29 August 2015 . 20 December 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141220040946/http://www.logting.fo/committee/view.gebs?menuChanged=20&type=0&currentComm.id=1 . dead .