Honorific Prefix: | The Most Excellent |
The Marquess of Oreja | |
Office: | European Commissioner for Transport |
Term Start: | 1994 |
Term End: | 1995 |
President: | Jacques Delors |
Predecessor: | Abel Matutes |
Successor: | Neil Kinnock |
Office1: | Minister of Foreign Affairs |
Term Start1: | 7 July 1976 |
Term End1: | 8 September 1980 |
Primeminister1: | Adolfo Suárez |
Predecessor1: | José María de Areilza, Count of Motrico |
Successor1: | José Pedro Pérez-Llorca |
Office2: | Secretary General of the Council of Europe |
Term Start2: | 1 October 1984 |
Term End2: | 1 June 1989 |
Predecessor2: | Franz Karasek |
Successor2: | Catherine Lalumière |
Birth Date: | 13 February 1935 |
Birth Place: | Madrid, Spanish Republic |
Party: | People's Party |
Otherparty: | Union of the Democratic Centre |
Parents: | Marcelino Oreja Elósegui |
Marcelino Oreja Aguirre, 1st Marquess of Oreja (born 13 February 1935) is a Spanish lawyer, diplomat and politician of the People's Party. He served as Foreign Minister of Spain between 1976 and 1980. Between 1984 and 1989 he was Secretary General of the Council of Europe. In 1989 he became member of the European Parliament and he served until 1993. In 1994 he was appointed European Commissioner for Transport and Energy and then European Commissioner for Institutional Relations and Communication Strategy.
Oreja was born on 13 February 1935 in Madrid, his father was Marcelino Oreja Elósegui.
In May 1973 he and a number of Madrid-based individuals founded the Spanish; Castilian: [[:es:Grupo Tácito|Grupo Tácito]], a group of intellectuals, politicians and journalists, some of them coming from the Franco regime and others from the democratic and monarchist opposition to the dictatorship. They - by the prospect of Franco's death - advocated a democratic solution to the dictatorial regime and had influence in different sectors linked to the system, and where active during the period of the Spanish Transition between 1973 and 1976. Oreja came up with the name after the Roman historian Tacitus, meaning that due to government censorship not everything could be said. The Spanish; Castilian: Grupo Tácito had its origins in a meeting of the Asociación Católica Nacional de Propagandistas’ (Catholic National Association of Propagandists) and group’s early influence was largely determined by its access to the Catholic press.
Oreja served as Spanish minister of foreign affairs from 5 July 1976 to 1980. July 1976 Oreja set out to reform Spain's 1953 Concordat with the Vatican, which resulted the same month in agreements with the Holy See laying out the separation of church and state.[1] The Spanish chief of state no more had the right to nominate Roman Catholic bishops, in exchange the Vatican dropped its right of "ecclesiastical forum".[2] Two months later Oreja signed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on behalf of Spain.
On 24 November 1977, in Strasbourg, Oreja signed Spain's accession to the Council of Europe,[3] with the European Convention on Human Rights entering into force in Spain on 4 October 1979.[4] [5]
He was Secretary General of the Council of Europe from 1984 to 1989.
He was elected to the European Parliament in 1989. His membership ended on 28 June 1993.[6]
In 1994 Oreja was appointed European Commissioner for Transport and Energy and then European Commissioner for Institutional Relations and Communication Strategy.
At the end of his mandate, Oreja retired from political life, returning to Spain. He continued to be active in many fields, being appointed Head of the Institute for European Studies at the CEU San Pablo University Foundation, Vice-Chair of the BBV Foundation (1996) and Doctor Honoris Causa at Zaragoza and Seville Universities (1996).[7]
On 8 April 2010 Oreja was made Marquess of Oreja.[9]
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