Li Andersson

Finnish politician (born 1987) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Li Sigrid Andersson[2] (born 13 May 1987)[3] is a Finland-Swedish politician who served as Minister of Education from 2019 to 2023.[4][5] A former leader of the Left Alliance, she was a Member of Parliament from 2015 to 2024. She is also a city councillor of Turku and was chair of the party's youth wing, Left Youth.

Prime MinisterSanna Marin
Preceded byJussi Saramo
Prime Minister
Quick facts Minister of Education, Prime Minister ...
Li Andersson
Official portrait, 2024
Minister of Education
In office
29 June 2021 (2021-06-29)  20 June 2023 (2023-06-20)
Prime MinisterSanna Marin
Preceded byJussi Saramo
Succeeded byAnna-Maja Henriksson
In office
6 June 2019 (2019-06-06)  17 December 2020 (2020-12-17)
Prime Minister
Preceded bySanni Grahn-Laasonen
Succeeded byJussi Saramo
Leader of the Left Alliance
In office
11 June 2016 (2016-06-11)  19 October 2024 (2024-10-19)
Preceded byPaavo Arhinmäki
Succeeded byMinja Koskela
Member of the Finnish Parliament
In office
22 April 2015 (2015-04-22)  15 July 2024 (2024-07-15)
ConstituencyVarsinais-Suomi
Member of the European Parliament
for Finland
Assumed office
16 July 2024
Personal details
BornLi Sigrid Andersson
(1987-05-13) 13 May 1987 (age 38)
PartyLeft Alliance
Other political
affiliations
European Left Alliance (EU)
SpouseJuha Pursiainen [fi]
Children1
Alma materÅbo Akademi University (BSS)
Websitehttps://liandersson.fi/
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Education

Political career

In the parliamentary elections of 2015 Andersson was elected with the highest number of personal votes in Varsinais-Suomi (with 17 seats).[7] Candidates in the district included the chairmen of the National Coalition Party and the Green League.[8] In the 2017 municipal elections, she got the most votes of any candidate outside of Helsinki placing sixth, nationally.[9]

In February 2016, Andersson announced running for Left Alliance chair.[10] On 6 June 2016, she received 3,913 (61.85%) votes in an unofficial poll between the party members, after which the other candidates withdrew from the running, leaving her the only remaining candidate. The decision was confirmed on 11 June 2016 at the Left Alliance party meeting in Oulu.[11][12]

After the 2019 parliamentary election, in which the Left Alliance gained four seats for a total of 16 (out of 200)[13] the party joined the SDP-led Rinne Cabinet. Andersson became Minister of Education. She temporarily left her ministerial post in December 2020 to go on maternity leave.[14]

In September 2023, Andersson announced her candidacy for the 2024 Finnish presidential election.[15] In the election, she received 4.88% of the total vote count and failed to advance to the second round of voting.[16]

On 5 March 2024, Andersson announced that she will relinquish Left Alliance leadership to run as a candidate in the European parliamentary elections.[17]

On 9 June 2024, in the 2024 European Parliament election in Finland, Andersson received more votes (247,604) than any other candidate had ever received in a European Parliament election in Finland.[18] In July 2024, she was nominated[19] and elected[20] to chair the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs, EMPL.[citation needed]

Views

In terms of foreign policy, she advocates for Finland to follow a Nordic policy line within NATO, promoting deeper cooperation within the alliance while adhering to principles such as the rejection of permanent NATO military bases, installations and nuclear weapons on Finland's soil.[21] Andersson criticized the Sipilä Cabinet's approach to internal devaluation, which she believes has led to declining wages and challenges for low-income earners.[22]

Personal life

She was born in Turku.[23]

Li Andersson cohabits with former ice-hockey player Juha Pursiainen [fi] in Turku.[24][25] She gave birth to their first child, a daughter, in January 2021.[26] Andersson belongs to the Swedish-speaking Finn national minority.[27]

Honors

Electoral history

Li Andersson at the government's press conference in 2020

Municipal elections

More information Year, Municipality ...
YearMunicipalityVotesResult
2008Turku175Not elected
2012Turku2,422Elected
2017Turku6,415Elected
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Parliamentary elections

More information Year, Constituency ...
YearConstituencyVotesResult
2011Varsinais-Suomi2,170Not elected
2015Varsinais-Suomi15,071Elected
2019Varsinais-Suomi24,404Elected
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European Parliament elections

More information Year, Constituency ...
YearConstituencyVotesResult
2014Finland47,599Not elected
2024Finland247,604Elected
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Source:[29][30]

References

Further reading

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