Bert de Vries
Bert de Vries | |
---|---|
Chairman of the Christian Democratic Appeal | |
In office 10 October 2001 – 2 November 2002 | |
Leader | Jan Peter Balkenende |
Preceded by | Marnix van Rij |
Succeeded by | Marja van Bijsterveldt |
Member of the Social and Economic Council | |
In office 15 July 1995 – 20 January 2001 | |
Chairman | See list
|
Minister of Agriculture, Nature and Fisheries | |
In office 18 September 1990 – 28 September 1990 Ad interim | |
Prime Minister | Ruud Lubbers |
Preceded by | Gerrit Braks |
Succeeded by | Piet Bukman |
Minister of Social Affairs and Employment | |
In office 7 November 1989 – 22 August 1994 | |
Prime Minister | Ruud Lubbers |
Preceded by | Jan de Koning |
Succeeded by | Ad Melkert |
Parliamentary leaderin the House of Representatives | |
In office 14 July 1986 – 14 September 1989 | |
Preceded by | Ruud Lubbers |
Succeeded by | Ruud Lubbers |
In office 4 November 1982 – 3 June 1986 | |
Preceded by | Ruud Lubbers |
Succeeded by | Ruud Lubbers |
Parliamentary group | Christian Democratic Appeal |
Member of the House of Representatives | |
In office 21 November 1978 – 7 November 1989 | |
Parliamentary group | Christian Democratic Appeal (1980–1989) Anti-Revolutionary Party (1978–1980) |
Personal details | |
Born | Berend de Vries 29 March 1938 Groningen,Netherlands |
Political party | Christian Democratic Appeal (1980–2010) |
Other political affiliations | Independent Christian Democrat (from 2010) Anti-Revolutionary Party (until 1980) |
Spouse |
Dieuwke van der Helm
(m.1969) |
Residence(s) | Bennekom,Netherlands |
Alma mater | University of Groningen (Bachelor of Economics,Master of Economics) Free University Amsterdam (Doctor of Philosophy) |
Occupation | |
Berend "Bert" de Vries(born 29 March 1938) is a retired Dutch politician of theChristian Democratic Appeal(CDA) party and economist.
De Vries attended aLyceuminGroningenfrom April 1950 until May 1958 and applied at theRijksbelastingacademieinRotterdamin June 1958 for a training as a tax collector graduating in August 1959 and simultaneously applied at theUniversity of Groningenin July 1958majoringinEconomicsand obtaining anBachelor of Economicsdegree in June 1960 and worked asstudent researcherbefore graduating with aMaster of Economicsdegree in July 1964. De Vries worked as a civil servant for theProvinceofGroningenas a tax collector for theTax and Customs Administrationfrom August 1959 until July 1964 and as a financial analyst forPhilipsinEindhovenfrom July 1964 until January 1968. De Vries applied at theFree University Amsterdamin January 1968 for apostgraduate educationinFinancial economicsand got adoctorateas anDoctor of Philosophyin Financial economics in July 1970. De Vries worked as a researcher at theErasmus University Rotterdamfrom May 1968 until November 1978. De Vries served on theAnti-Revolutionary Party Executive Boardfrom March 1975 until November 1978.
De Vries became aMember of the House of Representativesafter the resignation ofWillem Aantjes,taking office on 21 November 1978 serving as afrontbencherandspokespersonforEconomic Affairs,Social Affairs,Civil Service,Small business,Provincial Government Affairsand deputy spokesperson forSocial WorkandLocal Government Affairs.After theelection of 1982theLeader of the Christian Democratic AppealandParliamentary leaderof the Christian Democratic Appeal in the House of RepresentativesRuud Lubbersbecame Prime Minister in teCabinet Lubbers I,theChristian Democratic Appeal leadershipapproached De Vries as his successor as Parliamentary leader, De Vries accepted and became the Parliamentary leader, taking office on 4 November 1982. After theelection of 1986Lubbersreturned as Parliamentary leader on 3 June 1986 but following thecabinet formation of 1986Lubberscontinued as Prime Minister in theCabinet Lubbers IIand De Vries was approached to remain as Parliamentary leader, taking office on 14 July 1986. As Parliamentary leader of the largest party in the House of Representatives he also chaired the parliamentary committee for Intelligence and Security. After theelection of 1989Lubbersagain returned as Parliamentary leader on 14 September 1989. Following thecabinet formation of 1989De Vries was appointed asMinister of Social Affairs and Employmentin theCabinet Lubbers III,taking office on 7 November 1989. De Vries served as actingMinister of Agriculture, Nature and Fisheriesfrom 18 September 1990 until 28 September 1990 following the resignation ofGerrit Braks.In December 1993 De Vries announced his retirement from national politics and that he wouldn't stand for theelection of 1994.The Cabinet Lubbers III was replaced by theCabinet Kok Ifollowing thecabinet formation of 1994on 22 August 1994.
De Vries semi-retired from national politics and became active in theprivate sectorandpublic sectorand occupied numerous seats as a corporate director and nonprofit director on several boards of directors and supervisory boards (Unilever,Energy Research Centre,Tinbergen Institute,NIBC BankandArcadis) and served on several state commissions and councils on behalf of the government (Public Pension Funds APB,Sociale Verzekeringsbank,Raad voor Cultuur,Statistics Netherlands,Cadastre Agency,Social Employment Act Commission and theSocial and Economic Council). De Vries also worked as a trade association executive for theNederlandse Vereniging van Ziekenhuizenserving as chairman of the executive board from June 1995 until August 2001 and as an advocate, lobbyist and activist for theAnti-war movement,Human rightsand theTwo-state solutionfor theIsraeli–Palestinian conflict.De Vries also served as a distinguished professor of Financial economics at the Erasmus University Rotterdam from 1 December 1994 until 1 December 1998. De Vries served asChairman of the Christian Democratic Appealfrom 10 October 2001 until 2 November 2002 following the resignation ofMarnix van Rij.
De Vries is known for his abilities as anegotiatorandmanager.De Vries continued to comment on political affairs until his retirement in 2018 and holds the distinction as the second longest-serving Parliamentary leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal in the House of Representatives with 6 years, 273 days.[1]
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Berend de Vries was born inGroningen.His father had a detective agency. As a student, he was employed to assist in observation work, for collecting evidence of adultery. After the Mulo he was an official of the IRS. In the evening he attended the HBS. As a working student, he attended the study economics at theUniversity of Groningenand he received aMaster of Economicsdegree. Through the work atGroningen,he joinedPhilips,where he worked in the finance department. Thereafter (from 1968 to 1978) he worked at theErasmus University.At the same time he received hisPhDin Economic Sciences at theVrije Universiteit.
Politics
[edit]In 1978 he was elected as a member of theAnti-Revolutionary Partyas aMember of the House of Representatives.In 1982 he became leader of the CDA. He ruled the fraction with an iron fist and did not allow dissidents. Group Members Jan Nico Scholten and Stef Dijkman had to leave in 1983. As minister he steered theArbeidsvoorzieningswetandJeugdwerkgarantiewetby the First and Second Chamber. He was also the architect of the so-called Bami agreement on adaptation of the WAO. The name Bami agreement refers to the fact that during the consultations in the home of Bert de Vries, a meal of Chinese take-away food was consumed. With this agreement, the fall of the third Lubbers cabinet prevented.[citation needed]
After his departure from active politics until 1998 he was part-time professor of financial and economic policy at the Erasmus University in Rotterdam. After the forced resignation of Marnix van Rij in 2001, De Vries took over as chairman of theChristian Democratic Appealfor a year.[citation needed]
Decorations
[edit]Honours | ||||
Ribbon bar | Honour | Country | Date | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grand Crossof theOrder of the Crown | Belgium | 10 December 1990 | ||
Commanderof theLegion of Honour | France | 1 October 1991 | ||
Knight Commanderof theOrder of Merit | Germany | 21 March 1993 | ||
Grand Officerof theOrder of Bernardo O'Higgins | Chile | 5 August 1993 | ||
Knightof theOrder of the Netherlands Lion | Netherlands | 8 October 1994 | ||
Commanderof theOrder of Orange-Nassau | Netherlands | 30 April 1999 |
References
[edit]- ^"CDA-coryfee Bert de Vries verlaat partij"(in Dutch). De Volkskrant. 17 November 2010.Retrieved8 March2016.
External links
[edit]- Official
- (in Dutch)Dr. B. (Bert) de VriesParlement & Politiek
- 1938 births
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