Mikael Damberg Explained

Mikael Damberg
Office:Minister for Finance
Term Start:30 November 2021
Term End:18 October 2022
Primeminister:Magdalena Andersson
Predecessor:Magdalena Andersson
Successor:Elisabeth Svantesson
Office2:Minister for Home Affairs
Term Start2:21 January 2019
Term End2:30 November 2021
Predecessor2:Morgan Johansson
Successor2:Morgan Johansson
Primeminister2:Stefan Löfven
Office3:Minister for Enterprise
Term Start3:3 October 2014
Term End3:21 January 2019
Predecessor3:Annie Lööf
Successor3:Ibrahim Baylan
Primeminister3:Stefan Löfven
Office4:Leader of the Social Democrats
in the Swedish Riksdag
Term Start4:23 February 2012
Term End4:3 October 2014
Predecessor4:Carina Moberg
Successor4:Tomas Eneroth
Office5:Member of the Riksdag
Term Start5:30 September 2002
Term End5:3 October 2014
Constituency5:Stockholm County
Birth Date:13 October 1971
Birth Place:Solna, Sweden
Party:Social Democratic
Alma Mater:Stockholm University
Occupation:Politician
Spouse:Ingela Maria Wewertz
Residence:Solna

Lars Mikael Damberg (born 13 October 1971) is a Swedish politician of the Social Democratic Party. He served as Minister for Finance from 2021 to 2022. He previously served as Minister for Enterprise from October 2014 to January 2019 and as minister for home affairs from January 2019 to November 2021.

He has been Member of the Riksdag since 2002, representing Stockholm County, and was leader of the Social Democrats in the Riksdag from 2012 to 2014.[1]

Political career and education

Damberg was born in Solna, Stockholm County, Sweden. His father is the former Swedish Social Democratic party treasurer Nils-Gösta Damberg and his mother a former district[2] chairwoman of the Finnish Social Democratic Youth Riita-Liisa Damberg.[3] Damberg earned a degree in public administration from Stockholm University in 2000.

Early career

Between 1995 and 1997, Damberg worked as a political assistant to Minister for Defence Thage G. Peterson, and between 1997 and 1999 as political assistant and speechwriter to Prime Minister Göran Persson. Between 1999 and 2003, he was chairman of the Swedish Social Democratic Youth League.

Political career

Damberg joined the Swedish Social Democratic Youth League in the late 1980s and served as a member of the board of the organization between 1993 and 1997.[4] He also served as a member of the municipal council in Solna Municipality between 1991 and 2002.[4] He is chairman of the Social Democratic party district in Stockholm County since 2004.[4]

Member of the Swedish Parliament, 2002–present

Damberg has served as a member of the Swedish parliament since 2002, representing the Stockholm County constituency.[1] In the parliament he served as deputy chairman of the Committee on Education and as a member of the War Delegation.[1] He has served as a member of the Committee on Education since 2002.[1] He previously served as a deputy member of the Committee on Defence between 2002 and 2006, and as a deputy member of the Committee on Finance between 2006 and 2010.[1]

Minister of Enterprise

Damberg was appointed Minister for Enterprise on 3 October 2014, serving in the cabinet of Prime Minister Stefan Löfven.[5]

In this capacity, Damberg put forward a 2016 bill stipulating at least 40 percent of board members of listed firms should be women by 2019 at the latest;[6] however, the government later decided to not go ahead with the proposal.[7]

Also in 2016, Damberg approved Vattenfall’s decision to sell its loss-making lignite coal mines and associated power plants in Germany to Czech investor EPH.[8] In 2018, he approved an application from Nord Stream 2 to lay two gas pipelines through its economic zone in the Baltic Sea.[9] In August 2018, Damberg visited the crime scene where Karolin Hakim was killed by a gang member.[10]

Damberg also attended the Bilderberg Meeting in 2015 in Telfs-Buchen, Austria.[11]

Minister for Home Affairs

Damberg was later appointed minister for home affairs on 21 January 2019 in the second Löfven Cabinet.

Early in his tenure, Damberg coordinated the Swedish government’s efforts seeking support from European allies for a new international tribunal to prosecute Islamic State fighters and military personnel for war crimes perpetrated in Iraq and Syria, modelled on the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. Among others, he visited counterparts in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands to lobby support for the proposal.[12]

When Dan Eliasson, the head of Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB), was reported to have holidayed with family on Gran Canaria in violation of guidelines propagated by his own agency against unnecessary travel amid the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden, Damberg asked for his resignation.[13]

Also during his time in office, Damberg led efforts in 2021 to give police greater powers to access mobile communications data, including conversations using apps like Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp.[14] That same year, he appointed a commission to look at measures including the expansion of secret, preventative surveillance of suspects, currently only allowed in cases related to national security.[15]

Minister of Finance

Damberg was appointed Minister of Finance on 30 November 2021 after Magdalena Andersson became prime minister.

Other activities

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mikael Damberg (S) . . 16 November 2010 . 17 November 2010.
  2. https://www.expressen.se/nyheter/inloggad/damberg-ar-jattestolt-over-att-axla-den-rollen/ "Damberg: Är jättestolt över att axla den rollen"
  3. News: En rappare tar över SSU . Anette . Holmqvist . . 5 August 1998 . 17 November 2010 . sv.
  4. Web site: CV . . 4 October 2014.
  5. Cynthia Kroet (6 October 2014), Löfven unveils Swedish government Politico Europe.
  6. Johan Ahlander and Niklas Pollard (9 September 2016), Swedish govt says to propose gender quota law for listed firms - report Reuters.
  7. Cynthia Kroet (12 January 2017), Sweden drops female board members quota Politico Europe.
  8. Jan Lopatka and Arno Schuetze (8 April 2016), Swedish govt says to propose gender quota law for listed firms - report Reuters.
  9. Johan Sennero (7 June 2018), Sweden approves Nord Stream 2 pipeline application Reuters.
  10. News: Kvinna i Malmö ihjälskjuten – detta har hänt. Haddad. Prescilia. 2019-08-27. 2019-10-04. sv.
  11. Web site: Bilderberg Meeting . 2015-07-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150623005615/http://www.bilderbergmeetings.org/participants2015.html . 2015-06-23 . dead .
  12. Helen Warrell (19 May 2019), Sweden proposes international tribunal to try Isis fighters Financial Times.
  13. Charlie Duxbury (5 January 2021), Swedes fume at leaders’ lockdown lapses Politico Europe.
  14. Simon Johnson (4 August 2021), Sweden to widen police data-access powers to fight gang violence Reuters.
  15. Simon Johnson (27 August 2021), Sweden looks at allowing police to spy on suspected gangs to tackle gun violence Reuters.
  16. https://www.aiib.org/en/about-aiib/governance/board-governors/index.html Board of Governors
  17. http://www.ebrd.com/shareholders-and-board-of-governors.html Board of Governors
  18. https://www.eib.org/en/about/governance-and-structure/statutory-bodies/board-governors/members/mikael-damberg.htm Board of Governors: Mikael Damberg
  19. https://thedocs.worldbank.org/en/doc/74f5b30623436ec21c47216433e5a2aa-0330032021/original/MIGAGovernors.pdf Board of Governors, as of 5 January 2022
  20. https://www.nib.int/who-we-are/about/member-countries-governing-bodies-and-capital/board-of-governors Board of Governors
  21. https://thedocs.worldbank.org/en/doc/45fc8267f59fdf50a364f6538c2817e7-0330032021/original/BankGovernors.pdf Board of Governors, as of 5 January 2022