u-dog
01-28-2009, 11:12 AM
OK. You can't tell ME that the world is not changing. First an African-American President and now a Lesbian PM in Iceland.
Iceland to appoint gay woman minister to PM post
By DAVID STRINGER, Associated Press Writer David Stringer, Associated Press Writer – 1 min ago
REYKJAVIK, Iceland – The woman expected to become Iceland's interim prime minister is an openly gay former flight attendant who rose through the political ranks to lead a new leftist government.
Johanna Sigurdardottir, the island nation's 66-year-old social affairs minister, began as an union organizer for flight attendants and is now among the country's longest-serving lawmakers.
Both political parties forming Iceland's new coalition government support her appointment — and a decision could be announced as early as Thursday.
"She is a senior parliamentarian, she is respected and loved by all of Iceland," said Environment Minister Thorunn Sveinbjarnardottir.
Sigurdardottir will lead until new elections are held, likely in May. She will remain in office longer only if her center-left Social Democratic Alliance Party becomes the largest party in the election — an unlikely prospect, since it trails the Left-Green movement in opinion polls.
On Wednesday, Sigurdardottir chaired talks between her Alliance party and the Left-Greens, now the junior government partner.
Iceland's previous conservative-led government failed Monday after the country's banks collapsed in the fall under the weight of huge debts amassed during years of rapid economic growth. The country's currency has since plummeted, and inflation and unemployment are soaring.
Former Prime Minister Geir Haarde won't lead his Independence Party into the new elections because he needs treatment for throat cancer.
...
Sigurdardottir was a labor organizer when she worked as a flight attendant for Loftleidir Airlines — now Icelandair — in the 1960s and 1970s. She was first elected to Iceland's parliament in 1978 and served twice as social affairs minister, from 1987-1994, and again since 2007.
Despite her veteran status, many Icelanders regard her as more independent than her fellow legislators.
"If there's anyone who can restore trust in the political system it's her," said Eyvindur Karlsson, a 27-year-old translator. "People respect her because she's never been afraid of standing up to her own party. They see her as someone who isn't tainted by the economic crisis."
While a woman has served in the largely symbolic role of president, Sigurdardottir would be Iceland's first female prime minister. She lives with journalist Jonina Leosdottir, who became her civil partner in 2002, and has two sons from a previous marriage.
In 1995, Sigurdardottir quit the party and formed her own party, which won four parliamentary seats in a national election. Several years later, she rejoined her old party when it merged with three other center-left groups.
Sigurdardottir is best known for her reaction to a failed bid to become chairman of the Social Democratic Party — a forerunner of the current Social Democratic Alliance Party — in 1994.
"My time will come," she predicted in her concession speech.
___
Associated Press Writer Valur Gunnarsson contributed to this report.
And, indeed, her time HAS come. You go Prime Minister Sigurdardottir!
Iceland to appoint gay woman minister to PM post
By DAVID STRINGER, Associated Press Writer David Stringer, Associated Press Writer – 1 min ago
REYKJAVIK, Iceland – The woman expected to become Iceland's interim prime minister is an openly gay former flight attendant who rose through the political ranks to lead a new leftist government.
Johanna Sigurdardottir, the island nation's 66-year-old social affairs minister, began as an union organizer for flight attendants and is now among the country's longest-serving lawmakers.
Both political parties forming Iceland's new coalition government support her appointment — and a decision could be announced as early as Thursday.
"She is a senior parliamentarian, she is respected and loved by all of Iceland," said Environment Minister Thorunn Sveinbjarnardottir.
Sigurdardottir will lead until new elections are held, likely in May. She will remain in office longer only if her center-left Social Democratic Alliance Party becomes the largest party in the election — an unlikely prospect, since it trails the Left-Green movement in opinion polls.
On Wednesday, Sigurdardottir chaired talks between her Alliance party and the Left-Greens, now the junior government partner.
Iceland's previous conservative-led government failed Monday after the country's banks collapsed in the fall under the weight of huge debts amassed during years of rapid economic growth. The country's currency has since plummeted, and inflation and unemployment are soaring.
Former Prime Minister Geir Haarde won't lead his Independence Party into the new elections because he needs treatment for throat cancer.
...
Sigurdardottir was a labor organizer when she worked as a flight attendant for Loftleidir Airlines — now Icelandair — in the 1960s and 1970s. She was first elected to Iceland's parliament in 1978 and served twice as social affairs minister, from 1987-1994, and again since 2007.
Despite her veteran status, many Icelanders regard her as more independent than her fellow legislators.
"If there's anyone who can restore trust in the political system it's her," said Eyvindur Karlsson, a 27-year-old translator. "People respect her because she's never been afraid of standing up to her own party. They see her as someone who isn't tainted by the economic crisis."
While a woman has served in the largely symbolic role of president, Sigurdardottir would be Iceland's first female prime minister. She lives with journalist Jonina Leosdottir, who became her civil partner in 2002, and has two sons from a previous marriage.
In 1995, Sigurdardottir quit the party and formed her own party, which won four parliamentary seats in a national election. Several years later, she rejoined her old party when it merged with three other center-left groups.
Sigurdardottir is best known for her reaction to a failed bid to become chairman of the Social Democratic Party — a forerunner of the current Social Democratic Alliance Party — in 1994.
"My time will come," she predicted in her concession speech.
___
Associated Press Writer Valur Gunnarsson contributed to this report.
And, indeed, her time HAS come. You go Prime Minister Sigurdardottir!