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Sebastian Kurz

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Chancellor
  
Role
  
Politician

Name
  
Sebastian Kurz

Preceded by
  

Sebastian Kurz Sebastian Kurz


Born
  
27 August 1986 (age 37) Vienna, Austria (
1986-08-27
)

Political party
  
Education
  
GRG 12 Erlgasse (2004), University of Vienna

Similar People
  
Johanna Mikl‑Leitner, Werner Faymann, Reinhold Mitterlehner, Heinz Fischer, Heinz‑Christian Strache

Profiles

Live sergei lavrov and austrian fm sebastian kurz meet to discuss ukraine press statement


Sebastian Kurz (born 27 August 1986) is an Austrian politician, who has been Austria's Minister for Foreign Affairs and Integration since 2013. He had been described as Europe's youngest Foreign Minister at an age of 27. In May 2017 he became the chairman of the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP).

Contents

Sebastian Kurz on track to become Austria's next chancellor


Early life and education

Sebastian Kurz Sebastian Kurz oevpat

Kurz was born in Vienna and brought up in the city district of Meidling, where he still lives. He entered the Bundesgymnasium und Bundesrealgymnasium Erlgasse in 1996 and after his final exam in 2004 Kurz completed the obligatory military service. In 2011, he decided to suspend his law studies at the University of Vienna and to pursue his political career instead.

Youth branch and parliament

Sebastian Kurz wwwbmeiagvatfileadminprocessedcsmSebastia

In 2009 Kurz was elected chairman of the youth branch of the Austrian People's Party. Between 2010 and 2011 he was member of Vienna's city council, where he focused on generational fairness and ensuring pensions. In April 2011 Kurz was appointed to the newly created post of State Secretary for Integration (part of the Ministry of the Interior).

Sebastian Kurz Sebastian Kurz Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

In the 2013 general election, Kurz was elected as a member of parliament. He won the most direct votes of any member of parliament in the election.

Foreign Minister of Austria, 2013–present

In December 2013, Kurz became Austria's Foreign Minister, whose portfolio was at his request widened to include Social integration. At the time of his swearing-in Kurz was Austria's youngest government minister since the foundation of the republic and the youngest foreign minister in the European Union and the world. His first trip abroad took Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz to Croatia, marking the continuous Austrian support for an EU-membership of the Southeast Europe.

In February 2014, Kurz hosted the first of several rounds of negotiations on the nuclear program of Iran in Vienna, strengthening Austria’s position as place of dialogue. The negotiations were successfully concluded on 14 July 2015, when the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action was signed by Iran, the P5+1 and the European Union). Following the signature Sebastian Kurz said he was pleased with the outcome of the talks with Iran and expressed his hope that “the Vienna Agreement will act as catalyst towards the global nuclear disarmament ambitions”.

During his first year in office, Kurz chaired the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe until May 2014. In late 2014, he succeeded Radosław Sikorski as co-chair of the European People’s Party (EPP) Foreign Ministers Meeting, alongside Elmar Brok.

In May 2014, as Chairman of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe, Sebastian Kurz invited 30 Ministers of Foreign Affairs, among them Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and his Ukrainian colleague Andrii Deshchytsia, to Vienna in order to negotiate solutions to end the Ukrainian crisis in Vienna. As part of the Humanitarian Initiative, Kurz hosted the Vienna Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons in late 2014. Following his proposal, Vienna later hosted the negotiations leading to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action for the nuclear program of Iran in 2015.

In November 2014, Sebastian Kurz was appointed to lead the European People's Party Foreign Affairs Ministers together with Elmar Brok, Chair of Foreign Affairs Committee in the EP.

Actions over 2015–17

In the course of the European migrant crisis in 2015, Kurz called for a more effective control of the EU external borders and presented a 50-Point-Plan towards integration with special focus on the areas language and education, labour and job market, rule of law and values.

In 2015, Kurz proposed a new Islamgesetz (Islam Law) prohibiting the funding of mosques by entities from abroad, paying imams salaries, and regulating the version of the Quran that may be used in Austria. However, it also gives Muslims additional rights, such as the right to halal food and pastoral care in the military. Kurz said the changes were intended to "clearly combat" the influence of radical Islam in Austria. The law passed by the Austrian parliament in February 2015 did not call for an authorized version of the Quran.

Amid the Turkish government purge against members of its own civil and military service in reaction to a failed coup d'état in July 2016, Kurz summoned Turkey's ambassador to explain Ankara's links to demonstrations of thousands of people in Austria in support of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Chairman of the Austrian People's Party, 2017–present

Kurz was appointed acting party leader after the former head Reinhold Mitterlehner stepped down in May 2017. He was later formally elected chairman, receiving 98.7 percent of the votes at a party convention in Linz. The delegates also approved changes to the party statute, which put more power in the party leader’s hands.

Other activities

  • Austrian Development Agency, Chairman of the Advisory Council on Development Policy
  • Austrian Society for China Studies (ÖGCF), Member of the Board of Trustees
  • General Settlement Fund for Victims of National Socialism, Ex-Officio Member of the Board of Trustees
  • Political Academy of the Austrian People's Party, President (since 2015)
  • European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), Member
  • References

    Sebastian Kurz Wikipedia


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