Andrej Ďurkovský


Andrej Ďurkovský is a Slovak politician and former member of the Christian Democratic Movement. After being elected the mayor of Bratislava twice – from 2002 to 2010 – he was elected into the National Council of the Slovak Republic in the 2010 Slovak parliamentary election. In the Slovak capital, he remains a controversial figure because of construction activities lowering the quality of life in the city, but many of his scandals resonated also on a nationwide level and culminated in Ďurkovský being forced to voluntarily leave his political party KDH in 2011.

Early career

Ďurkovský attended the I. Horváth gymnasium in Ružinov and continued his studies at the Faculty of Civil Engineering at the Slovak University of Technology in 1982, both in Bratislava. In 1988 he took part in the Candle demonstration in Bratislava.
From 1983 to 1990 he was employed in Hydroconsult, š.p. Bratislava as the main project leader. In 1990 he worked as a project manager in Project office Vasko in Wien.

Political career

He entered politics after the Velvet Revolution and became a member of the Christian Democratic Movement in 1990. In 1994, he became mayor of the Old Town in Bratislava and remained there until 2002, when he was elected as the mayor of Bratislava. He was reelected, having won municipal election in 2006, and served his second term until 2010. Afterwards, he decided to not run for the office the third time.

Controversy

Despite making suspicious political decisions even as the mayor of the Old Town borough of Bratislava, it was in his position as the mayor of Bratislava where Ďurkovský generated most controversy.
Among his scandals are:
In the 2010 Slovak municipal election his latest scandal concerning the demolishing of Park kultúry a oddychu in Bratislava became one of the key points in that election that contributed to the shifting of political power from the right to left.
In January 2011, the police started investigation in the Bratislava water company, which was one of the reasons for Ďurkovský's forced departure from his political party KDH, which he co-founded in 1990. Former Prime minister of Slovakia Robert Fico described Ďurkovský's activities in the company as "robbery of the century".

Other activities and personal life

Andrej Ďurkovský is married since 1986 with his wife Františka and has three children - sons Filip and Michal and daughter Mária. His wife is active in NGOs aimed at helping autistic people, since one of the Ďurkovský children has autism. Ďurkovský speaks fluently English and German. He enjoys bicycling, sport diving and photography.