Robert Mathiasson
Swedish politician (born 1979)
Robert Mathiasson | |
---|---|
Robert Mathiasson speaking on International Workers' Day, 2014. | |
Chairman of the Communist Party (Sweden) | |
In office 2014–2019 | |
Preceded by | Anders Carlsson |
Succeeded by | Ulf Nilsson |
Personal details | |
Born | (1979-02-26) 26 February 1979 (age 45) Lund, Sweden |
Political party | Communist Party(until 2019) |
Residence | Alingsås |
Bengt Robert Mathiasson, born 26 February 1979 in Lund, is a Swedish politician who served as chairman of Sweden's Communist Party from 2014 until 2019. He succeeded Anders Carlsson at the 17th party congress in Gothenburg, held in 2014. He has worked as a removal man in Stockholm and as an industrial worker at a Volvo factory in Gothenburg. Mathiasson was previously chairman of Revolutionary Communist Youth between 2002 and 2004. In December 2019, Mathiasson left the Communist Party and, since 2020, he has been a columnist for a right-wing political online newspaper.
References
- Göteborgs-Posten – Kommunistiska Partiet har fått ny ordförande
- Party homepage – ”Vi står starka inför framtiden”
- Alingsås Tidning – Mathiasson ny KP-ledare – efterlyser revolution
- Expressen – Sven Wollter rörd till tårar under hyllningen
- YouTube – Röd Front 2013 med Robert Mathiasson, Kommunistiska Partiet
- Värmlands Folkblad – Antirasistiskt möte i Naturum
- Folkbladet – Kommunister kämpar för socialistiskt samhälle
- Kommunisternas tidigare ledare – ny krönikör för Nyheter Idag
- v
- t
- e
Communism in Sweden
- SSV/SKP/VPK (1919–1990)
- SKP Höglund branch (1924–1926)
- SP (1929–1948)
- SKA (1956–1967)
- KFML/SKP (1967–1990)
- MLK (1970–1983)
- KFML(r)/KPML(r)/Kommunistiska Partiet (1970–)
- APK/SKP (1977–)
- Kommunistiska Partiet i Sverige (1982–1993)
- Kommunistiska Förbundet (1989–)
- Carl Winberg
- Zeth Höglund
- Ture Nerman
- Kata Dalström
- Karl Kilbom
- Hugo Sillén
- Nils Flyg
- Sven Linderot
- Set Persson
- Hilding Hagberg
- C.-H. Hermansson
- Frank Baude
- Lars Werner
- Norrskensflamman (1917–1990)
- Folkets Dagblad Politiken (1916–1940)
- Arbetar-Tidningen (1929–1974)
- Ny Dag (1930–1990)
- Proletären (1970–)
- Swedish–Albanian Association (?–1999)
- Swedish–Cuban Association (1971–)
- Sweden–GDR Association (1956–1991)
- Sweden–Kampuchea Friendship Association (1976–1980)
- Swedish-Korean Association (1969–)
Communism Portal
This article about a Swedish politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e