Antti Kaikkonen

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Prime MinisterSanna Marin
Preceded byMikko Savola
Succeeded byAntti Häkkänen
Prime Minister
Antti Kaikkonen
Kaikkonen in 2019.
Minister of Defence
In office
28 February  20 June 2023 (2023-06-20)
Prime MinisterSanna Marin
Preceded byMikko Savola
Succeeded byAntti Häkkänen
In office
6 June 2019 (2019-06-06)  5 January 2023 (2023-01-05)
Prime Minister
Preceded byJussi Niinistö
Succeeded byMikko Savola
Member of the Finnish Parliament
for Uusimaa
Assumed office
19 March 2003
Leader of the Centre Party
Assumed office
15 June 2024
Preceded byAnnika Saarikko
Personal details
BornAntti Samuli Kaikkonen
(1974-02-14) 14 February 1974 (age 52)
PartyCentre
OccupationPolitician

Antti Samuli Kaikkonen (born 14 February 1974 in Turku, Finland) is a Finnish politician who has served as chair of the Centre Party since June 2024.[1] He has been a member of the Finnish Parliament from Uusimaa since 2003. He served as Minister of Defence from 2019 to 2023. Kaikkonen was the president of Finnish Centre Youth from 1997 to 2001. He has also been a member of Finnish Delegation to the Council of Europe since 2004.[2]

In 2013, Kaikkonen was convicted of corruption charges stemming from a campaign financing scandal.[3]

On 21 June 2016, Kaikkonen was chosen as the chairman of the Centre Party's parliamentary group.[4]

By 2019, Kaikkonen was parliamentary head of the coalition-leading Centre Party. Amidst the Oulu child sexual exploitation scandal, he called for all party heads in Parliament to meet, and declared "everyone who comes to Finland has to follow the local laws".[5]

Kaikkonen with U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Swedish Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist in Brussels, 13 October 2022

In the autumn of 2009, Kaikkonen received his share of the campaign finance. At that time, it was brought to public, that the Youth Foundation, of which Kaikkonen had been the chairman of the board since 2003, had distributed election support money to Kaikkonen, in municipal-, parliamentary-, and European Parliament -elections. In addition, it had also financed Matti Vanhanen's presidential election campaign, among other things.[6] Kaikkonen resigned from the chairman's place, and then stayed as a member of the board.[7]

The prosecutor demanded Kaikkonen's imprisonment in the Youth Foundation bribery trial, that began on 16 January 2012. In January 2013, the Helsinki District Court sentenced Kaikkonen to five months in conditional discharge for abuse of trust.[8] He did not appeal his verdict.[9]

Personal life

Honours

References

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