Tanja Fajon

Tanja Fajon

Tanja Fajon

Tanja Fajon in Strasbourg, France, 2014
Born (1971-05-09) May 9, 1971
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Residence Brussels, Belgium
Nationality Slovenian
Alma mater University of Ljubljana
University of Paris
Occupation Journalist, author,
politician, rapporteur
Member of the European Parliament
Years active 1991–present
Notable work Rise of the extreme right in Europe
Human tragedies at the doorstep of Europe
Constitution of European Union
Political party Social Democrats
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Spouse(s) Veit-Ulrich Braun
Awards Key of the city of Tirana
Honorary degree from AUBiH
Key of Heart from BIH
Website www.tanja-fajon.eu

Tanja Fajon (English: Tanya Fayon; born May 9, 1971) is a Slovenian politician and a journalist, currently serving as Member of the European Parliament. She is currently a head of the Slovenian delegation within the political group of Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats, and a vice-president of the Social Democrats.[1][2] She is also the author of several documentaries, including Rise of the extreme right in Europe, Human tragedies at the doorstep of Europe, and Constitution of European Union.[3]

Education

Tanja Fajon graduated in journalism at the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana. In 2005, she obtained a master's degree in Science and International Politics at the College of Interdisciplinary Studies, University of Paris.[1][4]

Tanja Fajon speaks Slovenian, English, German, French, and Croatian.[2]

Career

Career in journalism

Tanja Fajon worked as a journalist and assistant editor at Radio Glas Ljubljana from 1991 to 1995. She was also a reporter and a writer for the Slovenian daily newspaper Republika in 1993. She worked for RTV Slovenia from 1995 to 2001 as a local journalist, and as a correspondent for RTV Slovenia in Brussels from 2001 to 2009.[2] She was also a reporter for CNN from 1995 to 2001.[4] She covered issues from politics, to economy and business, in different States of the European Union, particularly in Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and France.[3]

Member of the European Parliament, 2009–present

In 2009, Tajon was elected to the European Parliament on behalf of the Social Democrats, associated with the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats. She was a vice chairwoman of the European Parliament delegation with Croatia until Croatia's membership in the European Union, and a member of the Committee on Organised Crime, Corruption and Money Laundering.

She is a full member of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs, a substitute member in the Committee on Transport and Tourism, and a substitute member of the European Union-United States delegation. She is also a vice chairwoman of the European Parliament Intergroup on Media, responsible for monitoring freedom of the press in Europe; the European Parliament Intergroup on LGBT Rights;[5] and the delegation for the EU-Croatia Joint Parliamentary Committee. In addition, she serves as a substitute member of the Delegation for relations with Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro and Kosovo, and was a rapporteur on the visa liberalisation process for the Western Balkans.[1][2][3]

Fajon contributed greatly to the Albanian citizens getting the right to freely travel in EU Schengen Area without visas.[6] This is the first step on Albania's path to European Union accession. In December 2010, a cafe named after Tanja Fajon was opened in her honor in Tirana, the capital of Albania.[7] She helped Bosnia and Herzegovina,[8] and Moldova gain freedom of Schengen movement as well.[3][9]

In late 2014, the two main political groups in the European Parliament agreed with Jean-Claude Juncker, then president-elect of the European Commission, that Fajon should be Slovenia’s member of the European Commission. However, the Slovenian government later announced that Violeta Bulc was going to be the country's nominee for the position of the European Commissioner on the Juncker Commission, replacing Alenka Bratušek.[10]

In 2016, Slovenian opinion polls showed her to be one of the most popular political figures in the country.[11]

Other activities

Personal life

Fajon lives mostly in Brussels with her husband Veit-Ulrich Braun, a German journalist.[3] Her hobbies are sports, music, and traveling.[2]

Honors and awards

References

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