Eva Joly
Eva Joly | |
---|---|
Member of the European Parliament for Île-de-France | |
In office 14 July 2009 – 1 July 2019 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Gro Farseth 5 December 1943 Europe Écologie–The Greens |
Spouse(s) | Pascal Joly (m.1967 divorce, deceased 2001)[1] |
Children | Caroline Joly and Julien Joly[1] |
Residence | Paris |
Occupation | Politician, MEP |
Profession | Judge |
Eva Joly (French:
Early life
Born in the neighbourhood of Grünerløkka, Oslo in 1943 during Norway's occupation by Nazi Germany, she was raised by a tailor father and a hairdresser mother and grew up in what was then a working-class district of the inner city.[2] She moved to Paris at 20 to work as an au pair.[3] There she married the son of the family who employed her, Pascal Joly (now deceased), and adopted her middle name 'Eva', which is easier to pronounce in French.[3]
Career
Anti-corruption activist
While working as a secretary, Joly studied law at night school and became a magistrate when she was 38.
She campaigned against corruption, in particular taking on, among others, former minister Bernard Tapie and the bank Crédit Lyonnais. Her best known case, however, was that of France's leading oil company, Elf Aquitaine.[3] In the face of death threats, she carried on the case to uncover several cases of fraud, leading to the conviction of tens of persons involved in the oil business. In 2001, she received for this work the award for integrity from the non-governmental organisation Transparency International.
In 2002, Joly was asked by the
In 2009, Joly was employed as a special adviser by the
The French film
Member of the European Parliament, 2009–2019
On 7 June 2009, Joly was elected as a French member of the
During her first term in Parliament between 2009 and 2014, Joly held the position of chairwoman of the
In addition to her committee assignments, Joly was a member of the Parliament's delegations for relations with Afghanistan and to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Mediterranean. She previously served as member of the delegation to the ACP–EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly between 2009 and 2014.
Joly also worked in Afghanistan during July 2012 as part of an UN anti-corruption mission.[17]
When Joly filed a lawsuit in December 2015 on behalf of the company's works council, a preliminary tax inquiry into McDonald's was opened in early 2015.[18] Joly accused the company of understating its earnings to avoid a legal obligation to share profits with employees.[19]
Candidate for President, 2011–2012
In 2011, Joly competed in the primaries of
Other activities
- Global Financial Integrity, member of the advisory board (since 2007)[21]
- Open Society Justice Initiative, Member of the Board[22]
- Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad), Counsellor (2005-2009)
Political positions
During her 2012 presidential campaign, Joly called for stopping all nuclear energy production in France by 2020 and deriving 40% of the country's energy needs from renewable sources by that date. She also wanted to replace the Stability and Growth Pact on budget discipline with an Ecological and Social Development Pact, with financial, environmental and social targets.[23]
In addition, Joly promised to increase minimum income benefits by 50%, freeze rents for three years and introduce new tax rates of 60% for those earning 100,000 euros or more a year and 70% for those earning over 500,000 euros. She also demanded a minimum 17% corporate tax rate on multinational companies.[23]
Ahead of the Green movement's primaries in 2021, Joly endorsed Éric Piolle[24] and later Yannick Jadot as the movement's candidate for the French presidential election in 2022.[25]
Controversies
In June 2010, Joly was sent a court summons by Nadine Berthélémy-Dupuis, an investigating magistrate in Paris, following a legal complaint from David Douillet, a retired sportsman and a national member of parliament from France's then-ruling Union for a Popular Movement. Douillet alleged that Joly breached France's defamation laws when she made comments at a public meeting in September 2009 about his banking arrangements.[26]
In November 2011, Joly was criticized for her support of the Greens' deal with the Socialist Party under which they gained safe seats in parliament, in exchange for accepting a slow-motion plan to reduce nuclear energy use to 50 percent of electricity generation by 2025.[27]
During her 2012 presidential campaign, Joly led reporters on a tour of sites linked to bad publicity or sleaze allegations around then-president Nicolas Sarkozy. Her tour included a Champs-Élysées nightspot in which Sarkozy feted his 2007 victory with millionaire friends, and the home of L'Oréal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, at the centre of an investigation into illegal alleged cash contributions to his 2007 campaign.[28]
Published works
- Notre affaire à tous, 2000
- Korrupsjonsjeger: Fra Grünerløkka til Palais de Justice, 2001
- Est-ce dans ce monde-là que nous voulons vivre?, 2003
- 9 May 2001 op-ed in Le Monde, signed with Renaud van Ruymbeke, Bernard Bertossa and other European magistrates or attorneys-general, titled "The black boxes of financial globalization", about the Clearstreamscandal (Clearstream has been qualified as a "bank of banks" and accused of being a major platform of global money laundering and tax evasion)
Novel
- Eva Joly and Judith Perrignon, Les yeux de Lira (Ardennes Editions, 2011) (trans. by Emily Read as The Eyes of Lira Kazan (Bitter Lemon Press, 2012); by Friðrik Rafnsson as Augu Líru (Skrudda, 2012))
Recognition
- 2002 – Peer Gynt Prize
- 2002 – European of the Year
- 2012 – Sophie Prize
References
- ^ a b "TRANSLATION: Le Figaro smears Eva Joly, the Green presidential aspirant in France". Ufppc.org. 5 February 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
- European Voice.
- ^ a b c d e Bowers, Simon (4 February 2011). "French legal firebrand turns her attention to corridors of power". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
- ^ "Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs anti-corruption project : November 2006 – June 2007 Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Anti-Corruption Project". Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. January 2007. p. 4. Archived from the original on 28 July 2012. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
- ^ "The Paris Declaration- A call for action against large scale corruption". Publish What You Pay. Transparency International. 30 June 2003. Archived from the original on 1 April 2012. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
- ^ Eva Joly adviser to Icelandic justice minister
- ^ "Eva Joly sérstakur ráðgjafi". mbl.is (in Icelandic). Morgunblaðið. 10 March 2009. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ Þóra Kristín Ásgeirsdóttir (10 June 2009). "Eva Joly íhugar að hætta". mbl.is (in Icelandic). Morgunblaðið. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- Dagblaðið Vísir (in Icelandic). 10 June 2009. Archived from the originalon 2 December 2010. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ "Eva Joly ósátt með seinagang mála – íhugar að hætta afskiptum af íslenska hruninu". Eyjan.is (in Icelandic). 10 June 2009. Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ Jón Hákon Halldórsson (20 October 2009). "Almenningur ber traust til Evu Joly". Vísir.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 26 May 2022.
- ^ Steve Johnson (1 March 2015), European money market fund reforms likened to 'hand grenade' Financial Times.
- ^ Eva Joly in Afghanistan
- ^ Ingrid Melander (30 May 2016), French finance minister rules out Google tax deal, more firms could be targeted Reuters.
- ^ David Jolly (26 May 2016), French Tax Officials Turn Hungry Eye to McDonald's The New York Times.
- ^ "Primaire écologiste : Eva Joly l'emporte par 58% des voix". Le Monde. 12 July 2011.
- ^ "Advisory Board – Global Financial Integrity". Archived from the original on 21 April 2014. Retrieved 14 November 2011.
- ^ Board of the Open Society Justice Initiative Archived 23 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Open Society Foundations (since 2006).
- ^ a b Vicky Buffery (27 March 2012), Factbox: Main proposals of French election candidates Reuters.
- ^ Jannick Alimi (30 June 2021), Présidentielle 2022 : Yannick Jadot annonce sa candidature à la primaire écologiste Le Parisien.
- ^ Laura Kayali and Pierre-Paul Bermingham (28 September 2021), French Greens narrowly choose MEP Yannick Jadot as presidential candidate Politico Europe.
- European Voice, 23 June 2010.
- ^ Nicholas Vinocur (9 April 2012), French Greens in crisis as Joly experiment sours Reuters.
- ^ Brian Love (19 April 2012), Hollande urges large turnout by French voters Reuters.
External links
- Media related to Eva Joly at Wikimedia Commons
- (in French) Eva Joly's Biography