Effie Achtsioglou
Effie Achtsioglou | |
---|---|
Έφη Αχτσιόγλου | |
Minister for Labour, Social Insurance and Social Solidarity | |
In office 5 November 2016 – 9 July 2019 | |
Prime Minister | Alexis Tsipras |
Preceded by | George Katrougalos |
Succeeded by | Giannis Vroutsis |
Member of the Parliament of Greece | |
Assumed office 7 July 2019 | |
Constituency | Athens B2 |
Personal details | |
Born | Eftychia Achtsioglou 4 January 1985 Giannitsa, Greece |
Political party | New Left (since December 2023) |
Other political affiliations | Syriza (until November 2023) |
Spouse | Dimitris Tzanakopoulos |
Children | 1 |
Education | Aristotle University of Thessaloniki |
Occupation |
|
Eftychia "Effie" Achtsioglou (Giannitsa, 4 January 1985), is a Greek politician who served as Minister for Labour, Social Insurance and Social Solidarity from 2016 to 2019. She is a member of the Hellenic Parliament since July 2019 and a leading figure of the New Left since December 2023. She was a member of SYRIZA and an MP for the party until she left in November 2023.
Early life and education
[edit]She was born in 1985, in Giannitsa. She completed her studies with the grade of Excellent in the AUTH Law School and in 2009 she acquired - again with the grade of Excellent - her postgraduate degree in Civil Law and Political Science from the same school.[1]
She worked in the Centre of International and European Economic Law (CIEEL) as part of a research scholarship, while in 2014 she completed her studies in Labour Law under the supervision of professor Aris Kazakos as part of a scholarship in the State Scholarship Foundation .[2]
Occupation
[edit]Achtsioglou is a Thessaloniki lawyer. She was also a research partner of the SYRIZA EP group in Brussels starting July 2014.[3]
Additionally, she worked in the European Parliament, alongside the Department of Civil Law, Political Procedure and Labour Law of the Law School of the Aristotle University from 2009 till 2013,[4] and as a researcher in the Centre of International and European Economic Law (CIEEL).[5]
Political career
[edit]In 2015 she stood as a candidate for the national ballot of SYRIZA in both the January[6] as well as the September elections.[7] Within SYRIZA she has steered party organs, both as a member of the central committee,[8] and as a member of the A’ Thessaloniki committee.[citation needed]
As the executive of the political office of the Ministry of Labour, she was responsible for negotiations of the Greek government with the institutions on issues regarding the job market and social security.[9] She has served as a member of the executive council of OAED and as a member of ASE.[citation needed]
Governmental positions (2016–2019)
[edit]From 5 November 2016 to 9 July 2019, she was the Minister for Labour, Social Insurance and Social Solidarity in the Tsipras II cabinet.[10] During her tenure she was, among other things, linked to an expansion of collective bargaining, a rise of the general minimum wage by 11% and by 27% for young people specifically (650 Euros), the abolishment of sub-minimum wage, the lowering of unemployment and of unregistered employment, the creation of OPEKA and new procedures for adoption.[11]
Greek MP (since 2019)
[edit]For the 2019 election she was placed second on the national ballot list of SYRIZA[12] and elected to the Hellenic Parliament.
In the June 2023 Greek legislative election she was elected as an MP representing the B2 Western Athens Constituency. Following the decision of Alexis Tsipras to step down as party leader, she announced on 12 July 2023 that she would run for the office of the President of SYRIZA.[13] However, her bid for the SYRIZA leadership was defeated by her rival Stefanos Kasselakis on 24 September 2023.[14] In November 2023 she left Syriza with 10 other MPs and on 5 December 2023, she became a member of New Left (Greece) parliamentary group.
Personal life
[edit]During her election campaign in 2019, she revealed that she was in a relationship with then Minister of State Dimitris Tzanakopoulos.[15] In January 2021 she stated that she was expecting a child.[16]
Works
[edit]Monographies:
- Ε. Αχτσιόγλου, Ι. Κουμασίδης και Σ. Μίτας. (2012). ‘Ξαναπιάνοντας το νήμα...για τη σχέση δημοκρατίας και σοσιαλισμού’, εκδ. Θύραθεν.
- E. Achtsioglou, (2010). Sustainable Development and Its Judicial Review in Greek Case Law: A conceptual and methodological analysis. LAP Lambert Academic Publishing.
Articles and chapters in collective works:
- E. Achtsioglou / M. Doherty (2014). There Must Be Some Way Out of Here...The Crisis, Labour Rights and Member States in the Eye of the Storm, European Law Journal, 20: 219 – 240.
- Ε. Αχτσιόγλου (2014). Η απόσπαση εργαζομένων κατά την παροχή υπηρεσιών στην ενωσιακή έννομη τάξη: Χαρακτηριστικό πεδίο έντασης μεταξύ των εθνικών συστημάτων εργατικoύ δικαίου και των κανόνων της ενιαίας αγοράς, σε Α. Καζάκου και Α. Στεργίου (επιμ.), Το «Νέο» Εργατικό Δίκαιο, Τιμητικός Τόμος Ιωάννη Κουκιάδη, εκδ. Σάκκουλα: 185–209.
- Ε. Αχτσιόγλου (2013). Δημόσιο συμφέρον και συλλογική αυτονομία: Η υποχρέωση επαγρύπνησης του δικαστή της συνταγματικότητας, ΕΕργΔ 2013, 1: 1–13.
- E. Achtsioglou (2013). Greece 2010–2012: labour in the maelstrom of deregulation, Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research, 19: 125–127.
- Γ. Κατρούγκαλος / Ε. Αχτσιόγλου (2012). «Μνημονιακές» πολιτικές και Εργατικό Δίκαιο, Ειδικό τεύχος στη μνήμη του Α. Καρδαρά, 17: 1333–1358.
- E. Achtsioglou / M. Rocca (2012). Trade unions, collective bargaining and collective action beyond the EU and its Court of Justice: A tale of shrinking immunities and sparkling new competences from the land of the Lesser Depression, Atelier de Droit Social (AdDS) Working Papers, 1: 1- 39.
- E. Achtsioglou (2011). The judicial treatment of the conflicts between trade union rights and economic freedoms in EU legal order: a critical analysis of the ECJ rulings in Laval and Viking cases, σε: Th. SAKELLAROPOULOS / A. STERGIOU (επιμ.), Posted workers in Europe: The cases of Greece and Bulgaria, Scientific Society for Social Cohesion and Development Press, Athens, 63–104.
References
[edit]- ^ "Έφη Αχτσιόγλου: Ποια είναι η 31χρονη υπουργός Εργασίας | Ελεύθερος Τύπος". Ελεύθερος Τύπος (in Greek). 4 November 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ "ΜΟΔΙΠ - Αριστοτέλειο Πανεπιστήμιο Θεσσαλονίκης | Βιογραφικό Σημείωμα". qa.auth.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ Κωστάκος, Δημήτρης. "Η Έφη Αχτσιόγλου στην ηλεκτρική καρέκλα του υπουργείου Εργασίας- Γιατί επελέγη - ΑΘΗΝΑ 984 - Ο ΣΤΑΘΜΟΣ ΤΗΣ ΠΟΛΗΣ". www.athina984.gr (in Greek). Archived from the original on 7 November 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ Οnline, Τα Νέα. "Ποιοι είναι οι εξωκοινοβουλευτικοί που συμμετέχουν στη νέα κυβέρνηση". Τα Νέα Οnline (in Greek). Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ "Ποια είναι η νέα υπουργός Εργασίας Έφη Αχτσιόγλου". in (in Greek). 4 November 2016. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ "Υποψήφιοι βουλευτές ΣΥΝΑΣΠΙΣΜΟΥ ΡΙΖΟΣΠΑΣΤΙΚΗΣ ΑΡΙΣΤΕΡΑΣ για τις εθνικές εκλογές της 25ης Ιανουαρίου 2015". www.syriza.gr. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ "ΨΗΦΟΔΕΛΤΙΟ ΕΠΙΚΡΑΤΕΙΑΣ ΣΥΡΙΖΑ" (in Greek). Retrieved 11 March 2018.
- ^ "ΣΥΡΙΖΑ Συνασπισμός Ριζοσπαστικής Αριστεράς". www.syriza.gr. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ "Αχτσιόγλου Ευτυχία (Έφη) | Vouliwatch". www.vouliwatch.gr. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
- ^ "Γενική Γραμματεία της Κυβέρνησης | ΤΣΙΠΡΑ Π. ΑΛΕΞΙΟΥ". www.ggk.gov.gr. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
- ^ vasval (9 July 2019). "Πως παρέδωσε το υπουργείο Εργασίας η Έφη με τα κόκκινα στον Γ.Βρούτση | Bank Wars - Τράπεζες". Retrieved 2 March 2021.
- ^ "Το ψηφοδέλτιο Επικρατείας του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ - Όλα τα ονόματα | Kathimerini". www.kathimerini.gr. 21 June 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
- ^ Έφη Αχτσιόγλου: Ανακοίνωσε την υποψηφιότητά της για την προεδρία του ΣΥΡΙΖΑ | 12/7/2023 | ΕΡΤ, 12 July 2023, retrieved 1 August 2023
- ^ "Greece's leftist Syriza gets new leader: An ex-banker". Politico.eu. 26 September 2023. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
- ^ Press, Alpha Free (26 June 2019). "Αχτσιόγλου - Τζανακόπουλος: Η υπουργός παραδέχθηκε για πρώτη φορά τη σχέση της (vid)". Alphafreepress.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 31 January 2021.
- ^ "Έγκυος η Έφη Αχτσιόγλου, περιμένουν παιδί με τον Δ. Τζανακόπουλο". ProtoThema (in Greek). 31 January 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2021.