Grethe Fenger Møller

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Prime MinisterPoul Schlüter
Preceded bySvend Auken
Succeeded byHenning Dyremose [da]
Grethe Fenger Møller
Minister of Labour
In office
10 September 1982  12 March 1986
MonarchMargrethe II
Prime MinisterPoul Schlüter
Preceded bySvend Auken
Succeeded byHenning Dyremose [da]
Member of the Folketing for Eastern Storkreds [da]
In office
15 February 1977  20 September 1994
Personal details
Born (1941-11-06) 6 November 1941 (age 84)
Frederiksberg, Denmark
PartyConservative People's Party
Alma mater
OccupationLawyer

Grethe Fenger Møller (born 6 November 1941) is a Danish lawyer and Conservative People's Party politician, who was elected to the Folketing as a representative of the Eastern Storkreds [da] constituency from 1977 to 1994. She was the Minister of Labour in the first government of Poul Schlüter between 1982 and 1986. She was president of the Danish Women's Society from 1974 to 1981 after previously being on its executive committee and primary board. Møller left politics after being sentenced to probation for 60 days for providing false testimony in court about the Tamil Case and worked as a clerk in the Ministry of Social Affairs' international office until she retired in 2008.

Møller was born in Frederiksberg, Denmark on 6 November 1941. She is the daughter of the department manager Torben Fenger Møller and his wife Ebba Møller.[1] Møller was brought up in Frederiksberg;[2] her parents were divorced when she was two years old and she lived with her mother and grandfather,[3] who was the owner of a women's clothing store and was active politically.[4] Her role model was the lawyer and politician Hanne Budtz.[4] In 1961, she attended Marie Kruse's School [da] and then relocated to the United States and enrolled at Hamline University in Minnesota for a year.[3] Møller studied law at the University of Copenhagen from 1962 to 1969 and earned a Candidate of Law degree.[1][5] During her studies, she joined the newly founded, anti-housewife, pro-abortion youth group of the Danish Women's Society (DWS) and was its deputy chair between 1965 and 1967.[2]

Career

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