Gerolf Annemans | |
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![]() Official portrait, 2024 | |
Member of the European Parliament forBelgium | |
Assumed office 1 July 2014 | |
Constituency | Dutch-speaking electoral college |
Leader ofVlaams Belang | |
In office 16 December 2012 – 19 October 2014 | |
Preceded by | Bruno Valkeniers |
Succeeded by | Tom Van Grieken |
Member of theChamber of Representatives | |
In office March 1987 – 28 April 2014 | |
Constituency | Antwerp |
Personal details | |
Born | Gerolf Emma Jozef Annemans (1958-11-08)8 November 1958 (age 66) Antwerp, Belgium |
Political party | Vlaams Belang (2004–present) |
Other political affiliations | Vlaams Blok (1985–2004) |
Spouse | Monika D'hooghe |
Children | 3 |
Alma mater | University of Antwerp |
Occupation | Lawyer •Politician |
Gerolf Emma Jozef Annemans (born 8 November 1958) is aBelgian lawyer,journalist and politician of theFlemish nationalist partyVlaams Belang (VB)[1] and formerly of its predecessor, theVlaams Blok. He has been amember of the European Parliament since 2014, and a city councilor inAntwerp since 2000. He served as a member of theChamber of Representatives from 1987 to 2014, and as a city councilor inBrasschaat from 1994 to 2000. He was the former leader of the VB from 2012 to 2014, andled the Vlaams Blok and VBparliamentary groups from 1991 to 2013.
Annemans read law at theUniversity of Antwerp (UA) and graduated in 1982. He held a seat on the council of the university's law faculty and the UA governing and executive boards. He was also the chief editor of the UA-newspaper and presidium member ofSofia, the guild of the Antwerp law students. During his academic studies from 1980 to 1981, Annemans was head of the editorial staff of the students' magazineTegenstroom, the club publication of theKatholiek Vlaams Hoogstudentenverbond (Flemish Catholic Students' Society, KVHV) society. After graduating he also contributed to several columns in the pro-Flemish conservative weekly newspaper't Pallieterke. Annemans was briefly promoted to a chief editing position at 't Pallieterke but eventually opted for a career in politics.
In 1985, Gerolf Annemans became a public activist of the Vlaams Blok (renamed Vlaams Belang on 14 November 2004), as he was offered the place of first substitute on the electoral list for theBelgian federal parliament in the constituency ofAntwerp. From 1987 onwards, he had a seat in that assembly, and thus is the longest established Vlaams Belang MP. Until 2013, he chaired the Vlaams Belang group. On his watch the party grew from a two-headed group to Belgium's third largest political faction, counting 18 members (after the2003 Belgian federal election). Furthermore, Annemans is a longstanding member of the city council of Antwerp, a prominent on the Vlaams Belang party board and former director of the Vlaams Belang political research department.
In his parliamentary work and speeches, he often mentions what he calls "the Belgian disease" (the inability ofFlemings andWalloons yet to rule together efficiently). Thecordon sanitaire (the unwritten agreement among all other parties not to work together with Vlaams Belang, irrespective of the number of its elected representatives) is viewed by Annemans as a problem that concernsFlanders in its entirety, due to his belief that it has been imposed on Flemish politics by an alliance of Francophone parties and their Flemish left-wing collaborators. Still, he believes this perceived instrument of threat and coercion will never bring Vlaams Belang to its knees. Annemans has always disputed the argument that a vote for Vlaams Belang, therefore, is pointless. The role he reserves for his party is that of a consistent, influential opposition party, able to adjust administration when necessary. In this way, he hopes the party may also function as an alternative to the moderate Flemish-regionalistN-VA, which, in his view, got entirely absorbed by Belgian power politics. Recently, Annemans did not only present himself as a member of theFlemish Movement, but also as a truerepublican. In doing so, he advocates thorough social reform throughFlemish independence, as well as through a far-reaching transformation of the EU on the basis of thesovereignty principle.
In his crusade against what he diagnoses as the "Belgian disease" (in this sense the political-administrative tangle facilitating inefficiency and corruption), he joined several parliamentary commissions for the investigation of scandals and embezzlements. In that capacity, Annemans took part in theDutroux commission (1996), the commission investigating the "Brabant massacres" (also 1996), theDioxin affair commission (1999), theSabena commission (2001), and the two commissions concerning theFortis affair (2009).
After the federal elections of 10 June 2007, Annemans warned his partisans on his weblog for underestimation of the "Dedecker factor". He did not believe that the then successfulLijst Dedecker (a one man-party founded and presided byJean-Marie Dedecker) would be a temporary hype such as the former partyROSSEM had been. According to Annemans, Dedecker had "broken the traditional monopoly of VB as theRobin Hood, the big mouth andLucky Luke which all others fear." Moreover, the Belgian kingAlbert II received Jean-Marie Dedecker for his consultations following the elections, and not the then VB party chairmanFrank Vanhecke. In a political talk show Annemans called it an error to exclude cooperation with Lijst Dedecker.
In 2010, Annemans announced the publication of a new book in which he would outline a blueprint for the "active preparation of Flemish independence." The main point of this book, that was co-authored by Steven Utsi and released in October 2010, is that the Flemings mustn't cling to concrete road maps for independence, but rather pursue an open strategy. Withinternational law at its side, Flanders already possesses some convincing trumps for dismantling Belgium on its own initiative. For the Flemings, everything will depend on properly reacting against eachFrancophone move, as well as choosing the right moment for exiting the Belgian federation. The book was edited five times, an English translation titled "After Belgium, the orderly split-up" included, and was sold over 6,000 times, a true bestseller to Flemish standards. The fourth print got outlawed in 2012 by thecommercial court ofBrussels. The judge ruled that the publication would have violated the rights of the British telecommunications provider O2, because the chemical symbol foroxygen (also the company's logo) figures on its cover. Furthermore, the book inspired Annemans to conceive two manifestoes that gave more depth to the Vlaams Belang platform: the Hoofdstad-Manifest on Brussels (spring 2013), and the Europa-Manifest on the EU (autumn 2013).
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With the abovementioned book and manifestoes, Annemans confirms his status of ideological trailblazer. He sees Vlaams Belang as a hotbed of new political viewpoints, even as a socialavant-garde. This innovative ambitions also resound in his most recent publication "1914–2014: Van loopgraven tot republiek" (1914–2014: Fromtrench to republic). According to Annemans, the book should not be considered as a political testament, but rather as a 'helicopter perspective' of Flanders' past and the challenges the Vlaams Belang ought to deal with in the twenty-first century. As director of the Vlaams Belang political research department, and afterwards as party chairman, he carried the final responsibility for several election programmes as well as the texts and brochures for ideological congresses and colloquiums. In total, Annemans wrote ten books on republican, ethical and security matters.
Many times he had been alleged to be co-author of the widely despised70-point plan (Belgium) to stop immigration, though this isn't correct. On the other hand, Annemans has a clear-cut vision on immigration and always insisted on the importance of an elaborate migration chapter in the VB platform. However, his adversaries have created the wrong impression that the Vlaams Blok/Belang repeatedly attempted to launch policy plans based on the 70-point plan. In fact, the plan has been eliminated by the party board many years back.
On 16 December 2012, Annemans was elected chairman of the Vlaams Belang.[2] He succeededBruno Valkeniers after an unsatisfactory electoral result. The party had lost over two-thirds of its electorate in its traditional stronghold Antwerp. Annemans' chairmanship was confirmed in a secret ballot by a large majority of 92% of party members. The fresh VB foreman championed a strict migration policy and a revision of EU cooperation, but, above all, voiced more than ever the demand for an independent Flanders.
On 25 May 2014, he was the leading candidate of Vlaams Belang for theEuropean Parliament and was elected as the sole MEP of his party. That day the party suffered a serious defeat, not only at the EU elections, but also in the regional and federal elections. Already on the day after, Annemans announced his retreat and an early chairmanship election in October 2014.[3]
Gerolf Annemans is married and has three children.[4]