Jacques Tichelaar

Dutch politician
Jacques Tichelaar
King's Commissioner of Drenthe
In office
1 May 2009 – 1 March 2017
Preceded byRelus ter Beek
Succeeded byJozias van Aartsen (ad interim)
Parliamentary leader - Labour Party
House of Representatives of the Netherlands
In office
14 February 2007 – 22 April 2008
Preceded byWouter Bos
Succeeded byMariëtte Hamer
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
23 May 2002 – 1 May 2009
Personal details
Born
Jacques Tichelaar

(1953-01-02) 2 January 1953 (age 71)
Heerenveen, Netherlands
Political partyLabour Party (Partij van de Arbeid - PvdA)
RelationsMarried
Residence(s)Oranjewoud, The Netherlands
Alma materPedagogical College - Heerenveen (BEd)
OccupationPolitician, trade union leader, educator
Website(in English) Province of Drenthe website

Jacques Tichelaar (born 2 January 1953) is a Dutch politician and former trade union leader and educator. He is a member of the Labour Party (Partij van de Arbeid). Since 1 May 2009 he had been the King's Commissioner (governor on behalf of the king) in the province of Drenthe. He resigned on 1 March 2017.

Previously he was a teachers' trade union leader from 1994 to 2002 and an MP from 2002 to 2009. He acted as a Parliamentary group leader from 2007 to 2008.

In 2002 he received an honorary doctorate in business administration at Kingston University.

Biography

In 1973 Tichelaar finished his havo (secondary school) and enrolled at the Pedagogische Academie (academy for primary school teachers) in Heerenveen. Before he entered politics, Tichelaar was vice-director of a primary school, general secretary of the education labour union General Union of Education Personnel, and chair of its successor the General Education Union, which is affiliated with the FNV, the major Dutch federation of labour unions.

Since the 2002 election he was a member of the Tweede Kamer (House of Representatives). He focused on education and agriculture. He was also chair of the committee for finance.

During the 2006–2007 Dutch cabinet formation, Tichelaar was secondant of Wouter Bos during the confidential negotiations. He was unexpectedly chosen over MPs like Nebahat Albayrak, the PvdA's second candidate on the list, because of his experience with negotiations from his union years. Since Tichelaar had also had many conversations with CDA leader Maxime Verhagen about the reasons why the 2003 information talks between the two parties had failed, he was expected to understand the CDA party best among PvdA MPs.[1]

Since 1 May 2009 he was the Queen's Commissioner (since 30 April 2013 named King's Commissioner) in the province of Drenthe. He resigned on 1 March 2017, after first denying, and then admitting, to have favoured the companies of close relatives more than once. Evidence emerged that he had put forward the company of his sister in law, for a project in one of the province's buildings, pushing aside the already accepted proposition of a third party. In 2013 he had interfered in favour of his brother in law, a hotel entrepreneur, who had a conflict with one of the municipalities in Drenthe.[2][3]

See also

References

  • (in Dutch) Parlement.com biography
  1. ^ (in Dutch) Van secondant tot kroonprins: Jacques Tichelaar Archived 2007-09-10 at the Wayback Machine, Buitenhof, 11 February 2007
  2. ^ Tichelaar vertrekt als commissaris van de Koning, Dagblad van het Noorden, 1 March 2017
  3. ^ Commissaris van de koning Tichelaar stapt toch op, NOS, 1 March 2017
Political offices
Preceded by King's Commissioner of Drenthe
2009–2017
Succeeded by
Jozias van Aartsen (ad interim)
  • v
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House of Representatives, 30 November 2006 – 16 June 2010
Christian Democratic Appeal
(CDA – 41)
Labour Party
(PvdA – 33)
Socialist Party
(SP – 25)People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy
(VVD – 21)Party for Freedom
(PVV – 9)GroenLinks
(GL – 7)Christian Union
(CU – 6)Democrats 66
(D66 – 3)Party for the Animals
(PvdD – 2)Reformed Political Party
(SGP – 2)Independent
(Lid-Verdonk – 1)
Underline signifies the parliamentary leader (first mentioned) and the Speaker
Angle brackets signify a replacement member or a member who prematurely left this House of Representatives

See also: Members of the House of Representatives of the Netherlands, 2010–2012
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