Andrej Kiska

President of Slovakia from 2014 to 2019 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andrej Kiska

Andrej Kiska (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈandrej ˈkiska]; born 2 February 1963) is a Slovak politician, entrepreneur, writer and philanthropist who served as the fourth president of Slovakia from 2014 to 2019. He ran as an independent candidate in the 2014 presidential election in which he was elected to the presidency in the second round of voting over Prime Minister Robert Fico.[1][2][3] Kiska declined to run for a second term in 2019. He has written two books about happiness, success, and his life.

Quick Facts 4th President of Slovakia, Prime Minister ...
Andrej Kiska
Kiska in 2014
4th President of Slovakia
In office
15 June 2014  15 June 2019
Prime MinisterRobert Fico
Peter Pellegrini
Preceded byIvan Gašparovič
Succeeded byZuzana Čaputová
Chairman of For the People
In office
28 September 2019  8 August 2020
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byVeronika Remišová
Personal details
Born (1963-02-02) 2 February 1963 (age 62)
Poprad, Czechoslovakia
Political partyFor the People (2019–2021)
Spouse(s)
Mária Kisková [sk]
(m. 1983; div. 2001)

Martina Kisková (Živorová)
(m. 2003)
Children5
Alma materSlovak University of
Technology
Signature
Close

Early life

Kiska was born in Poprad. He studied electrical engineering. His father was an active member of the ruling Communist Party of Slovakia (KSS). He also applied for Communist party membership, but was rejected.[4] Kiska is an ethnic Goral.[5]

Career

Summarize
Perspective

Kiska moved to the United States in 1990, one year after the Velvet Revolution.[6] He later founded Triangel and Quatro,[7] two Slovakia-based hire-purchase companies that give the buyer the possibility to pay for goods in several installments over a number of months instead of paying the full price at once.[8]

Philanthropy

In 2006, Kiska co-founded a non-profit charitable organization called Dobrý anjel (translated as Good Angel), in which donors help families that have found themselves in a difficult financial situation as a result of a family member contracting a serious disease, such as cancer).[7][9] By 2016, more than 170,000 people have donated to this organization in Slovakia.[10] Good Angel expanded their activities also to Czech Republic in 2014, where 60.000 are paying their monthly contributions in 2016.[11]

Tax authorities accused his co-owned company KTAG (with his brother Jaroslav) of tax non-compliance and under-payments, regarding expenses for his presidential campaign. The company eventually agreed to pay the taxes and a penalty.[12][13]

Kiska's companies were involved in a number of tax-non compliance issues. Improperly reported income from various business activities resulted in a smaller VAT and Income tax payments.[14][15] Process against Kiska and his business partner from KTAG s.r.o. Eduard Kučkovský commenced in June 2023 at District Court in Poprad.[16] He was convicted and sentenced to a two-years of suspended imprisonment and a fine of 15,000 euros (about $16,300).

In 2024, the fine was cancelled while the prison term was reduced to one following an appeal.[17] The conviction resulted in the cancellation of his pension by the Slovak presidential office.[18] Andrej Kiska responded that the verdict was the result of threats made by Robert Fico. “Fico threatens inconvenient judges with disciplinary proceedings, and fear has spread among the judiciary. I can’t explain today’s decision of the Regional Court any other way” … “I will not stop fighting to clear my name until the truth is revealed, and we are filing an appeal with the Supreme Court.[19]

In his personal tax filing he did not disclose personal propagation before elections performed by his company as a non-cash income, but claimed that he paid for it. Eventually tax office confirmed he did not pay, did not report non-cash income, and his company did not report income from propagation activities but fully deducted all VAT. Remaining costs additionally decreased tax base.[12][20][21]

President of Slovakia (2014–2019)

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
Kiska with President of Chile Michelle Bachelet, Santiago de Chile, 2016
Thumb
Kiska with President of Latvia Raimonds Vējonis, Riga, December 2018
Thumb
Kiska with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in the Grassalkovich Palace, February 2019

In the first round of the 2014 Slovak presidential election, Kiska placed second with 24% of the vote, behind Prime Minister Robert Fico (28%). As none of candidates got more than 50% of votes, Kiska and Fico progressed to a presidential run-off vote on 29 March 2014. With the support of right-wing parties and other defeated candidates, Kiska won decisively in the second round, receiving nearly 60% of the vote.[22] He took office on 15 June.[23]

Kiska announced on 15 May 2018 that he will not participate in 2019 presidential election, arguing that his departure might end "the era of political confrontation" his country faced and citing a desire to spend more time with his family.[24][25] At the time Kiska made the announcement, polls indicated that he was Slovakia's most trusted politician and that he would have likely been the frontrunner in the election had he chosen to present himself as a candidate.[25]

Foreign policy

Kiska supports Kosovar independence and is in favour of Slovakia diplomatically recognising Kosovo as an independent sovereign state.[26][27]

Post-presidency

In 2019, Kiska founded the Za Ľudí party.[28] Despite being a co-favourite candidate for premiership, the party barely entered parliament trespassing the electoral threshold by mere 0.77% of votes in February 2020 election.[29] By August, announced his retirement from active politics citing personal and health reasons.[30]

Kiska has spoken out against Russia over the Russian invasion of Ukraine and supports sanctions against them.[31][32][33][34]

In 2023 Slovak parliamentary election, Kiska endorsed and supported SaS, which ran a group of former Za Ľudí candidates, including former Minister of Justice Mária Kolíková, following an intra-party split with Kiska's successor as ZĽ leader Veronika Remišová.[35]

Personal life

Kiska was married to Mária Kisková [sk], an educator and politician from 1983 until 2001. They had two children, Andrej Kiska (born 1986) and Natália Kisková (born 1991).[36] The couple divorced in 2001 after 18 years of marriage.[citation needed]

In 2003, Kiska married his second wife, Martina Kisková. The couple have three children, a daughter and two sons namely Veronika (born 2004), Viktor (born 2009), and Martin (born July 2017), during his presidency.[36]

Honours and awards

Foreign honours

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.