'Gaston Egmond Thorn' (
September 3 1928 –
August 26 2007) was a
Luxembourg politician who served in a number of high-profile positions, both domestically and internationally. Amongst the posts that he held were
Prime Minister of Luxembourg (1974–79),
President of the United Nations General Assembly (1975), and
President of the European Commission (1981–85).
Thorn was born in
Luxembourg City. While still at school he engaged in resistance activities during the
German occupation, and spent several months in prison. After the war he studied law in
Montpellier,
Lausanne and
Paris, and practised law in Luxembourg before entering politics in
1959, representing the liberal
Democratic Party. He was Chairman of the Democratic Party from
1961.
Thorn was Foreign Minister and Foreign Trade Minister of Luxembourg from
1969 to
1980,
Prime Minister from
1974 to
1979 and Minister of Economics from
1977 to
1980. He was also a member of the
European Parliament from
1959 to
1969, and
President of the United Nations General Assembly from
1975 to
1976.
In
1980 Thorn was chosen as President of the Commission of the European Communities (now called the
European Union), in succession to
Roy Jenkins. He took office on
January 12 1981. He was seen as very close to the President of
France,
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, and generally as a defender of French interests in European politics.
Although Thorn was not considered a very forceful Commission President, during his term of office the Commission continued to expand its power, both at the expense of the national governments of EC members, and of the European Parliament, with which the Commission engaged in a constant power struggle. In this Thorn laid the groundwork for his successor
Jacques Delors, who took the Commission to the height of its power.
After leaving the Commission Presidency in
1985, Thorn went into business. He was chairman of Luxembourg's largest media company
CLT and president of the Banque Internationale de Luxembourg.
Thorn remained active in international and political affairs, as President of the
International European Movement and as a member of the
Trilateral Commission and of the
Jean Monnet Committee. He was also president of the
Liberal International, a grouping of
liberal political parties, and is now this organisation's President of Honour. He was married to Liliane Thorn-Petit, a journalist.
References
★
Obituary, ''The Guardian'', 28 August 2007
★
Obituary, ''The Daily Telegraph'', 28 August 2007
★
Obituary, ''The Times'', 28 August 2007
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