František Mikloško

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
František Mikloško
Member of the National Council of the Slovak Republic
Slovak National Council until December 31, 2004
Assumed office
25 October 2023
In office
1 March 1990 – 12 June 2010
Speaker of Slovak National Council
In office
26 June 1990 – 23 June 1992
Preceded byRudolf Schuster
Succeeded byIvan Gašparovič
Personal details
Born (1947-06-02) 2 June 1947 (age 76)
Nitra, Czechoslovakia
NationalitySlovak
Political partyVPN (1989–1992)
KDH (1992–2008)
KDS (2008–2014)
KDH (2023–present)
SpouseJana Sasínová
Alma materUniverzita Komenského, Bratislava
OccupationMathematician

František Mikloško (born 2 June 1947) is a Slovak politician. He was the Speaker of the Slovak National Council from 1990 to 1992 and a long serving MP of the National Council of the Slovak Republic (1990-2010). For most of his career, he was a member of Christian Democratic Movement.

Early life[edit]

Mikloško studied Mathematics at the Comenius University, graduating in 1966. Already as a student, he was active in the activities of the Catholic Church, which had a complicated relationship with the Communist regime at the time. At first, Mikloško's activities were limited to low profile organization of small student gatherings while working as a researcher at the Slovak Academy of Sciences. However, since 1980s, Mikloško started gradually to contribute to organization of large religious pilgrimages, which has attracted the attention of the Communist regime. In 1983 he was fired from the Academy and could only work in manual occupations. In spite of the regime repression, Mikloško continued to organize increasingly anti-regime rallied, most prominently the Candle demonstration in Bratislava in 1988. After the Velvet Revolution, he became the first Speaker of the Slovak National Council.[1]

Political career[edit]

Mikloško was one of the longest-serving members of parliament in Slovakia. He was also a candidate in the 2004 presidential election and the 2009 presidential election. Mikloško did not participate in 2010 parliament election and retired from politics.

On 12 March 2008 František Mikloško, together with Vladimír Palko, Pavol Minárik, and Rudolf Bauer, established a new party called Conservative Democrats of Slovakia which was dissolved in 2014.

After 15 years, Mikloško returned to run for KDH ahead of 2023 parliamentary election.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "František Mikloško". Ústav pamäti národa (in Slovak).
  2. ^ "Za KDH bude kandidovať aj Škripek, ktorý donedávna pôsobil v Kresťanskej únii". Denník Štandard (in Slovak). 29 May 2023. Archived from the original on 30 May 2023. Retrieved 29 May 2023.