Jean-Claude Juncker

Former

Birthday December 9, 1954

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Redange, Luxembourg

Age 69 years old

Nationality Luxembourg

#17313 Most Popular

1954

Jean-Claude Juncker (born 9 December 1954) is a Luxembourgish politician who was the 23rd prime minister of Luxembourg from 1995 to 2013 and 12th president of the European Commission from 2014 to 2019.

1974

He joined the Christian Social People's Party in 1974.

1979

He studied law at the University of Strasbourg, graduating with a master's degree in 1979; although he was sworn into the Luxembourg Bar Council in 1980, he never practised as a lawyer.

Juncker grew up in Belvaux, in the commune of Sanem in the canton of Esch-sur-Alzette in the south of Luxembourg.

Dominated by coal and steel manufacturing, the neighbourhood was home to a multicultural workforce of Italian and Portuguese immigrants.

This social environment influenced Juncker's way of thinking and his ideology of integration and togetherness.

He visits his hometown as often as he can.

Juncker's father was heavily wounded during his service in the Wehrmacht at the Eastern Front, which left him visibly scarred.

Throughout his life Joseph Juncker was also a member of the Christian Labour union, and he took his son to several union and party meetings, which impacted his son's political views even in his early days.

Having come from a poor family, he made central to his political ideology the fight against social inequalities, and for equal opportunities and fairness for all people.

Jean-Claude went to a Jesuit Boarding school close to the border of Belgium; as a schoolboy, Juncker negotiated and debated with the school's administrators on behalf of his classmates.

Juncker was one of twelve children in a large household, where money was tight; he learned from a young age the importance of saving.

This experience proved useful during his later role as Minister of Finance.

Following Juncker's graduation from the University of Strasbourg, he was appointed as a Parliamentary Secretary.

1984

He later won election to the Chamber of Deputies for the first time in 1984 and was immediately appointed to the Cabinet of Prime Minister Jacques Santer as Minister of Labour.

1985

In the second half of 1985, Luxembourg held the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Communities, permitting Juncker to develop his European leadership qualities as chair of the Social Affairs and Budget Councils.

It was here that Juncker's pro-Europe credentials first emerged.

1989

He also was Finance Minister from 1989 to 2009 and President of the Eurogroup from 2005 to 2013.

Shortly before the 1989 election Juncker was seriously injured in a road accident, spending two weeks in a coma.

He has stated that the accident has caused him difficulty with balancing since.

He nonetheless recovered in time to be returned to the Chamber of Deputies once more, after which he was promoted to become Minister for Finance, a post traditionally seen as a rite of passage to the country's premiership.

His eventual promotion to prime minister seemed at this time inevitable, with political commentators concluding that Santer was grooming Juncker as his successor.

Juncker at this time also accepted the position of Luxembourg's representative on the 188-member Board of Governors of the World Bank.

Juncker's second election to Parliament, in 1989, saw him gain prominence within the European Union; Juncker chaired the Council of Economic and Financial Affairs (ECOFIN), during Luxembourg's 1991 presidency of the Council of the European Communities, becoming a key architect of the Maastricht Treaty.

Juncker was largely responsible for clauses on Economic and Monetary Union, the process that would eventually give rise to the euro, as well as in particular is credited with devising the "opt-out" principle for the UK to assuage its concerns.

1992

Juncker was himself a signatory to the Treaty in 1992, having, by that time taken over as parliamentary leader of the Christian Social People's Party.

2005

In 2005, he became the first permanent President of the Eurogroup.

2013

By the time Juncker left office as prime minister in 2013, he was the longest-serving head of any national government in the EU and one of the longest-serving democratically elected leaders in the world, with his tenure encompassing the height of the European financial and sovereign debt crisis.

2014

In 2014, the European People's Party (EPP) had Juncker as its lead candidate, or Spitzenkandidat, for the presidency of the Commission in the 2014 elections.

This marked the first time that the Spitzenkandidat process was employed.

Juncker is the first president to have campaigned as a candidate for the position prior to the election, a process introduced with the Treaty of Lisbon.

The EPP won 220 out of 751 seats in the Parliament.

On 27 June 2014, the European Council officially nominated Juncker for the position, and the European Parliament elected him on 15 July 2014 with 422 votes out of the 729 cast.

He took office on 1 November 2014 and served until 30 November 2019, when he was succeeded by Ursula von der Leyen.

2015

Juncker has stated that his priorities would be the creation of a digital single market, the development of an EU Energy Union, the negotiation of the Transatlantic Trade Agreement, the continued reform of the Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union—with the social dimension in mind, a "targeted fiscal capacity" for the Eurozone, and the 2015–2016 British EU membership renegotiations.

Juncker was born in Redange and spent the majority of his childhood in Belvaux.

His father, Joseph, was a steel worker and Christian trade unionist who was forcibly conscripted into the German Wehrmacht during World War II, following the Nazi occupation of Luxembourg.

Juncker has often remarked that the horrors of war he heard from his father's experiences had a profound influence in shaping his views on the need for European reconciliation and integration.

His mother was born Marguerite Hecker.

He studied at the Roman Catholic école apostolique (secondary school) at Clairefontaine on the edge of Arlon in Belgium, before returning to Luxembourg to study for his Baccalaureate at Lycée Michel Rodange.