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Neelie Kroes (; born 19 July 1941) is a retired
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politician of the
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy The People's Party for Freedom and Democracy ( , VVD) is a Conservative liberalism, conservative-liberal List of political parties in the Netherlands, political party in the Netherlands. The VVD, whose forerunner was the Freedom Party (Netherl ...
(VVD) and businessperson who served as European Commissioner from 22 November 2004 to 1 November 2014. Kroes studied
Economics Economics () is a behavioral science that studies the Production (economics), production, distribution (economics), distribution, and Consumption (economics), consumption of goods and services. Economics focuses on the behaviour and interac ...
at the Rotterdam School of Economics obtaining a
Master of Economics The Master of Economics (MEcon or MEc) is a postgraduate master's degree in economics comprising training in economic theory, econometrics, and/or applied economics. The degree is also offered as an MS or MSc, MA or MCom in economics; var ...
degree. Kroes worked as a researcher at her alma mater from September 1963 to April 1968, and as a corporate director for a transport company in
Delft Delft () is a List of cities in the Netherlands by province, city and Municipalities of the Netherlands, municipality in the Provinces of the Netherlands, province of South Holland, Netherlands. It is located between Rotterdam, to the southeast, ...
from April 1968 until August 1971, and for the chamber of commerce of Rotterdam from July 1969 until August 1971. Kroes became a House of Representatives (Netherlands), Member of the House of Representatives shortly after the 1971 Dutch general election, election of 1971 on 3 August 1971, and served as a frontbencher and spokesperson for Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management, Transport and Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (Netherlands), Education. After the 1977 Dutch general election, election of 1977 Kroes was appointed as State Secretary for Transport and Water Management in the First Van Agt cabinet, Cabinet Van Agt–Wiegel taking office on 28 December 1977. After the 1981 Dutch general election, election of 1981 Kroes returned to the House of Representatives on 25 August 1981, and again served as a frontbencher and spokesperson for Transport. After the 1982 Dutch general election, election of 1982 Kroes was appointed as List of Ministers of Infrastructure of the Netherlands, Minister of Transport and Water Management in the First Lubbers cabinet, Cabinet Lubbers I taking office on 4 November 1982. After the 1986 Dutch general election, election of 1986 Kroes continued her office in the Second Lubbers cabinet, Cabinet Lubbers II. In June 1989, Kroes announced that she wouldn't stand for the 1989 Dutch general election, election of 1989. Kroes semi-retired from active politics and became active in the private sector, private and public sectors as a corporate and non-profit director and served on several :nl:Staatscommissie, state commissions and councils on behalf of the government, and served as Rector Magnificus of the Nyenrode Business University from June 1991 until January 2000. In October 2004, Kroes was nominated as the next European Commissioner in the Barroso Commission#First college, First Barroso Commission, and was given the heavy portfolio of European Commissioner for Competition, Competition taking office on 22 November 2004. In November 2009, Kroes was re-nominated for a second term in the Barroso Commission#Second college, Second Barroso Commission, and was given the heavy portfolio of European Commissioner for Digital Economy and Society, Digital Agenda and was appointed as one of the Vice-President of the European Commission, Vice-Presidents serving from 9 February 2010 until 1 November 2014. Kroes retired from active politics at the age of 73 and again became active in the private and public sectors as a corporate and non-profit director and served as an occasional diplomat for several economic delegations on behalf of the government. Following her retirement Kroes continued to be active as an advocate and lobbyist for promoting Startup company, startup companies and entrepreneurship. She holds the distinction as the first List of female cabinet members of the Netherlands, female Minister of Transport starting an informal tradition of women serving as Dutch Transport Ministers that has continued since 1982 (save for two exceptions First Balkenende cabinet, 2002–2003 and Fourth Balkenende cabinet, 2007–2010) for over year.


Career before politics

Neelie Kroes was born on 19 July 1941 in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Her father owned the transport company Zwatra. Kroes attended a Protestant Education in the Netherlands, grammar school in Rotterdam. She continued to a Protestant high school. In 1958, she went to study economics at the Erasmus University Rotterdam, Erasmus University in Rotterdam. In 1961, Kroes was praeses of the R.V.S.V. (the largest Rotterdam sorority). She was also elected as a member of the University Council. After obtaining a Bachelor of Economics and later a
Master of Economics The Master of Economics (MEcon or MEc) is a postgraduate master's degree in economics comprising training in economic theory, econometrics, and/or applied economics. The degree is also offered as an MS or MSc, MA or MCom in economics; var ...
degree in 1965, she became a research fellow at the economic faculty at that university. During this period Kroes was involved in the women's organisation within the VVD. In this period she also was member of the board of heavy transporting company "ZwaTra", the company of her father.


Local and national politics

Neelie Kroes was first elected member of the Rotterdam city council for the VVD in 1970. In 1971, she was elected to the House of Representatives of the Netherlands, House of Representatives, forcing her to stop her fellowship. In parliament, she became spokesperson for education. She remained a member of parliament until 1977, when she became State Secretary for Transport, Public Works and Water Management in the Netherlands cabinet Van Agt-1, First Van Agt Cabinet, responsible for Postal and Telephone Services and Transport. In 1981, she briefly returned to the House of Representatives, while her party, VVD, was in the opposition. In 1982 she returned to office in the Netherlands cabinet Lubbers-1, First and Netherlands cabinet Lubbers-2, Second Lubbers Cabinets, now as the Ministry of Transport, Public Works and Water Management (Netherlands), Minister of Transport, Public Works and Water Management, a post that she held until 1989. As a minister she was responsible for the privatisation of the Postgiro (Postbank, initially a part of the PTT), the Post and Telephone Services, the Harbour Pilotage services, as well as the commissioning of the Betuweroute, Betuwe Railway. Kroes refused to become Ministry of Defence (Netherlands), Minister of Defence in 1988. During her tenure as minister, she was involved in the so-called TCR affair, about the illegal sale of warships. She had also a business relationship with a tank cleaning company (TCR), which illegally received governmental subsidies.


After National Politics

After her ministerial career, Kroes spent two years working on two projects as an advisor to Karel van Miert, at that time European Commissioner for Transport. She also became a member of the Rotterdam Chamber of Commerce, furthermore she served as a board member for Ballast Nedam (shipping), ABP-PGGM Capital Holdings N.V. (a joint subsidiary of the pension funds Stichting Pensioenfonds ABP, ABP and PGGM), Nordic Investment Bank, NIB (an investment bank), McDonald's Netherlands, Nedlloyd, and Nederlandse Spoorwegen (the Dutch railroad company). In 1991, Kroes became chairperson of Nyenrode Business Universiteit, Nyenrode University, a private business school. During this period Kroes also was a member of the Advisory Board of the Prof.Mr. B.M. Teldersstichting, the scientific bureau of VVD. According to her husband, Bram Peper, from 1993 to 2001, Kroes relied on astrologers and clairvoyants for personal and business advice. Until 2004 Kroes maintained an office in the castle of Jan-Dirk Paarlberg, a real estate mogul who was convicted to four and a half years in prison for money-laundering and extortion. One of the astrologers advising Kroes during that time was Lenie Drent, who had been providing business advice to Paarlberg for decades. Kroes has held and still holds many side offices, mainly in cultural and social organisations. She is chairperson of ''Poets of all Nations'', the ''Delta Psychiatric Hospital'' and of the board of the Rembrandt House Museum. Also, she was a member of several boards of commissioners, for instance at Nedlloyd (a shipping company) and Lucent Technologies (an information and communication technologies company).


European Commission


Commissioner for Competition

In 2004, Kroes was appointed the European Commissioner for Competition. At the time, her nomination was heavily criticised because of her ties to big business and alleged involvement in shady arms deals. Kroes has tried to uphold her integrity; whenever she has to deal with issues concerning competition in branches of industry in which she used to be active as a board member, Commissioner Charles McCreevy, McCreevy takes over her responsibilities. As chairperson of Nyenrode Business University, Kroes awarded an honorary doctorate to Microsoft founder Bill Gates in 1996. As a European Commissioner for Competition one of her first tasks in 2004 was to oversee the sanctions against Microsoft by the European Commission, known as the European Union Microsoft competition case. This case resulted in the requirement to release documents to aid commercial interoperability and included a €497 million fine for Microsoft. Kroes attended conferences organized by the Bilderberg Group every year between 2005 and 2012. In 2009, she was transferred to another European Commissioner post, namely ICT and Telecom. She was also appointed as one of the vice-presidents of the European Commission.


Commissioner for Digital Agenda

In 2010, she became European Commissioner for Digital Agenda in the second Barroso Commission. The Digital Agenda for Europe was proposed by the European Commission on 19 May 2010. The Digital Agenda for Europe is supported by the EU Digital Competitiveness Report launched also on 19 May 2010. She is a proponent of Free and Open Source Software. Since 2010, she has served as a Commissioner for the Broadband Commission for Digital Development which leverages broadband technologies as a key enabler for social and economic development. In 2010, it was suggested that she would become prime-minister in the Netherlands, when Mark Rutte would stay in parliament due to difficulties in the formations in the new Cabinet. However, eventually Rutte became prime-minister. In December 2011, Kroes invited Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg who had resigned as Federal Ministry of Defence (Germany), German Minister of Defence in March 2011, due to plagiarism charges – as advisor to the European Commission as part of its ''No Disconnect Strategy'' designed to promote Internet censorship, Internet freedom. In November 2012, Kroes made international news when she said her advisers at the Internet Governance Forum in Baku, Azerbaijan had been the victims of computer hacking.


Later career

Kroes is currently leading ''StartupDelta'', a public-private initiative to help promote the Netherlands as a destination for startup companies. For the 2019 European Parliament election, 2019 European elections, she was brought into the European election campaign by Guy Verhofstadt's Open Vlaamse Liberalen en Democraten, Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats (Open VLD) in Belgium. In addition, Kroes has been holding a variety of paid and unpaid positions.


Controversy

At the end of the 1980s, intensive research into environmental crime among chemical waste processing companies ended in a fiasco. As Minister of Transport, Public Works and Water Management, Kroes had conceived the plan to provide subsidies to the companies TCA and TCR (Tanker Cleaning Amsterdam and Rotterdam, respectively). Even though she was made aware of the company's criminal activities, including mixing chemical waste into fuel oil, she pushed through with the subsidies. The resulting TCR affair sparked a parliamentary inquiry in 1997. Kroes was accused by the investigative committee that she had helped a rogue company with a government subsidy into the saddle, which made the environmental crimes possible. In the mid-1990s, Kroes was involved in the frigate affair: the failed purchase of six Dutch frigates (amounting to 1.2 billion euros) by the United Arab Emirates. As chairman of a consortium of Holland Signaal, Ballast Nedam and Koninklijke Schelde (supported by the navy, the Port of Rotterdam Authority and the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs), Kroes attempted to exchange the frigates for oil supplies. When it turned out that she was also using her chairmanship to serve the business interests of a personal friend, the businessman Joop van Caldenborgh, she was removed from her position by the government. It was only in 2011 that it became known that she had also put Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld, Prince Bernhard forward as a lobbyist in this deal, in violation of the agreements that Bernhard had made with the Den Uyl cabinet after the Lockheed bribery scandals, Lockheed affair. The frigate affair brought Kroes into contact with Jordanian investor Amin Badr-El-Din, with whom she would run the company Mint Holdings some years later, which was planning to take over part of Enron. In 2016, leaks to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (who also oversaw the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers leaks) revealed that from 2001 to 2009 Kroes was the director of Mint Holdings, a company registered in the Bahamas. As part of the EU rules, a commissioner is obliged to declare previous and current economic interests, but she did not declare her directorship of the Bahamas company. Further, EU commissioners are not allowed to hold outside directorships while in office (Kroes was in office 2004–2014). According to her lawyer, Kroes acknowledged the situation, calling it an "oversight", and declared that she would take full responsibility. The “Uber files”, leaked documents in 2022, revealing active and irregular efforts of Uber in lobbying regulators, revealed that Kroes prepared her appointment at the taxi company when she was still in office. She did not disclose the numerous appointments she had with firms executives when European Commissioner for competition and then new technologies (a position she held until November 2014). After resigning from the European Commission, she actively helped Uber bending regulations by opening her contacts to the company, including Netherlands then Prime Minister Mark Rutte, breaking her 18-months duty of réserve that ex commissioner must apply. She finally joins Uber Public Affairs team in 2016.


Personal life

Kroes was married to Labour Party (Netherlands), social democratic minister and mayor Bram Peper. She is a confidant of Ayaan Hirsi Ali, known for her criticism of Islam and having a fatwa issued, and persuaded her to switch allegiance from the social democratic PvdA to the VVD.


Corporate boards

* Uber, Member of the Public Policy Advisory Board * Salesforce, Non-Executive Board Board of Directors (since 2016)


Non-profit organizations

* Open Data Institute, Non-Executive Member of the Board (since 2015)


Recognition


Awards

Kroes was International Road Federation Man of the Year of 1993. Kroes made the Forbes' Forbes Magazine's List of The World's 100 Most Powerful Women, The World's 100 Most Powerful Women list multiple times: as number 53 in 2009, 47 in 2008, 59 in 2007.


Decorations


Honorary degrees


References


External links

: ; Official *
Dr. N. (Neelie) Kroes
Parlement & Politiek {{DEFAULTSORT:Kroes, Neelie 1941 births Living people Businesspeople from Rotterdam Dutch academic administrators Dutch corporate directors Dutch chief executives in the finance industry Dutch European commissioners Dutch expatriates in Belgium Dutch financial advisors Dutch lobbyists Dutch members of the Dutch Reformed Church Dutch nonprofit directors Dutch nonprofit executives Dutch women academics 20th-century Dutch businesswomen 20th-century Dutch businesspeople Erasmus University Rotterdam alumni European commissioners for competition Knights Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau Knights of the Order of the Netherlands Lion Ministers of transport and water management of the Netherlands Members of the House of Representatives (Netherlands) Merrill (company) people Municipal councillors of Rotterdam Academic staff of Nyenrode Business University People from Wassenaar People's Party for Freedom and Democracy politicians Protestant Church Christians from the Netherlands Recipients of the Order of the Cross of Terra Mariana, 2nd Class Rectors of universities in the Netherlands State Secretaries for Transport of the Netherlands Women European commissioners Women government ministers of the Netherlands Women heads of universities and colleges 20th-century Dutch economists 20th-century Dutch educators 20th-century Dutch women politicians 20th-century Dutch politicians 21st-century Dutch businesswomen 21st-century Dutch businesspeople 21st-century Dutch economists 21st-century Dutch women politicians 21st-century Dutch politicians