Maria João RodriguesGOIH (born 25 September 1955) is a Portuguese academic and politician who served as Minister of Employment in Portugal and was a Member of the European Parliament. She was Vice-President of the Group of the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) from 2014 until 2019. Since 2017, Rodrigues is President of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS).[1]
Her political career began as Minister of Employment of Portugal in the first government of Prime Minister António Guterres (1995–1997) and she was policy maker working in several posts in the European Institutions since 2000, most notably in the leading teams of EU Council Presidencies. She is an expert on EU political economy and has served as Special Advisor to a number of elected representatives at both Portuguese and EU level, in particular to António Guterres, the current Secretary General of United Nations, and to the former President of the Party of European Socialists (Poul Nyrup Rasmussen).
In 2014, Rodrigues was elected Member of the European Parliament, integrating the Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) - the second most important EP Group, with 190 members coming from the 28 Member States, which elected her in 2014 as Vice-president. As S&D Vice-President, she was in charge of general coordination and interface with the other EU institutions and member of the Committees of Employment and Social Affairs (EMPL) and Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON).
A Professor of Economics at the University Institute of Lisbon (ISCTE-IUL) since 1987,[3] Maria João Rodrigues started her career in public affairs in 1993 as a consultant in the Ministry of Employment and Social Security, then headed by José Falcão e Cunha in the government of Prime Minister Aníbal Cavaco Silva.[2] Following the victory of the Socialist Party in the 1995 general elections, she was appointed Minister for Employment and Training by Prime Minister António Guterres, on 28 October 1995.[4] She attained a strategic agreement with social partners to prepare Portugal membership to the Eurozone (1997), completed a reform in the management of the European Social Fund and held this office until 25 November 1997.
After her role of Minister of Employment, Rodrigues was appointed by Prime Minister António Guterres special advisor and Head of the Prime Minister's Forward Studies Unit in 1998. In this capacity, she played a role during the Portuguese Presidency of the European Union, in the first semester of 2000. The Portuguese Presidency succeeded in securing a compromise on the so-called Lisbon Strategy, a plan that was aimed at boosting growth, competitiveness and employment level in the EU building on innovation. The strategy was adopted at a European Council meeting in Lisbon in March 2000, a meeting in which Maria João Rodrigues acted as a sherpa for the Prime Minister.[5] She contributed to build a compromise between the delegations of the British and French governments, by resorting to the open method of coordination. Maria João Rodrigues continued to monitor the developments of the Lisbon Strategy, in particular as Special Advisor to the Luxembourg Presidency of the European Union for the Mid-term Review of the Lisbon Strategy (2005) and special advisor to the European Commission and Jean-Claude Juncker on the Lisbon strategy.
Looking back on this experience in 2010, Rodrigues wrote "Even if there were clear failures, the implementation of the Lisbon strategy should not be considered a failure.".[6] In 2007, the EU average GR was 2.7% and 16 million jobs have been created. Most of all, it changed the governance of the European Union with higher coordination of economic and social policies, involving around 400 measures.[7]
In 2007, Rodrigues was appointed by Prime Minister José Socrates as special advisor for the European Union Council Presidency dealing with the Lisbon Treaty, the Lisbon strategy and EU Summits with international partners China, India, Brazil, Russia and Africa. This mission, which achieved the negotiation of the Lisbon Treaty, came to end on 1 January 2008, when the rotating presidency of the European Union was handed to Slovenia. Rodrigues has also started a process of "Dialogues for Sustainable Development" with these international partners, sponsored by Gulbenkian Foundation.
In 2010, the Lisbon Strategy was succeeded by the Europe 2020 strategy, a new EU plan for "smart, sustainable and inclusive economic growth". Although not acting in any official capacity anymore, Rodrigues' previous experiences with the Lisbon strategy meant that her viewpoint on the Europe 2020 was highly valued all across the political spectrum and in many European capitals.[8][9][10][11]
In December 2015 Rodrigues was one of the candidates for the Portuguese Council of State (an advisory council to the President of the Republic) in the list put forward by the left-wing parties in the Portuguese parliament, as substitute member.[13][14]
On Thursday April 18, 2019, Maria Joao Rodrigues was found guilty by the European Parliament of psychological harassment of one of her employees.
[17] Among the nine separate allegations against Rodrigues were attempts to reduce working hours and salary of a staff member after maternity leave, asking an employee on sick leave to carry out late-night tasks and demanding staff work well beyond normal office hours.[17] During the investigation, she was left off the Portuguese PS electoral list.[18] All the above referred allegations were considered not proved and were dismissed by the Brussels Labour Court judgement on 14 July 2022.[19]
Political positions
Rodrigues has also been developing a policy response[20] to the Eurozone crisis, with respect to the European Financial Stability Facility and the economic governance of the European Union. In October 2010, she published in the European current affairs online newspaper EurActiv a "short theatre piece" summing up her thoughts on the issue of European Economic Governance, and several other policy papers, reports and books followed.[21] In December 2011, Rodrigues argued for the use of a "big bazooka" to address the eurozone crisis, in the form of a large scale government debt purchase by the European Central Bank.[22]
Main outcomes in EU policy-making
The EU “Lisbon Strategy” for Growth and Jobs – with new policy orientations for industrial, information society, research, innovation, education, employment, social protection and environment policies (2000-2010). The follow-up with the EU2020 strategy
The EU Lisbon Treaty, final negotiation team (2007)
The EU Declaration on Globalization adopted by the European Council (2007)
Preparation of the EU Summits with EU strategic partners: USA, China, India, Russia, South Africa and Brazil (2007-2012)
The new phase of the Erasmus Programme (2008)
The priorities for the European regional development policy (2005–07)
The responses to the Euro-zone crisis (2008–13)
The European Pillar of Social Rights (2017)
EP Strategic Resolutions on the European Commission Annual Work Programme (2015-2017)
Main academic roles
Professor of European Economic Policies at the Institute for European Studies, Université Libre de Bruxelles
Professor of Economics at the Lisbon University Institute (ISCTE-IUL), currently on leave due to public interest activity
President of the European Commission Advisory Board in charge of preparing the 7th Framework Programme for Research in socio-economic sciences
Economic rapporteur in the ESPAS, European Strategic Planning and Analysis System
Coordinator of the Project “Dialogues for Sustainable Development” bridging between the EU and Brazil, Russia, India and China, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation
Member of the OECD network of government long-term strategists
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister and Head of the PM’s Forward Studies Unit
^"Iscte". Archived from the original on March 23, 2011. Retrieved 2011-12-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^"Governo de Portugal". Archived from the original on June 9, 2011. Retrieved 2011-12-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^Magone, José María. "The developing place of Portugal in the European Union" Transaction Publishers, 2004, p.34
^Lisbon Agenda Group. "On the EU2020 agenda: contributions after the Lisbon agenda experience" Notre Europe, 2010, p.25
^"Europe, Globalization and the Lisbon Agenda", Maria João Rodrigues (ed) in collaboration with L. Soete, J. Goetschy, P.C. Padoan, R. Boyer, J. Berghman, A. Török, B.Å. Lundvall, B. Coriat, M. Telò, I. Begg and W. Drechsler, Edward Elgar: Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, 2009, page 383