Iceland review - 2016, Side 37

Iceland review - 2016, Side 37
ICELAND REVIEW 35 should be apolitical. “A president listens to the people and supports good ideas, but doesn’t put issues on the agenda according to his own opinion.” Traditionally, the role of the president is largely ceremonial, with the president representing the nation rather than the administration. The president can veto legislation and send the laws to national referendums, which no president ever did until Ólafur Ragnar came along. The constitution indicates that the president has the authority to hire and fire minis- ters, introduce resolutions and dissolve parliament—an authority which some of the other candidates would like to take advantage of. However, legal experts have stated that the president cannot act on that authority on his or her own accord. VOICE OF THE PEOPLE While campaigning, Guðni faces many questions and always seems to have his answers straight. However, during a debate organized by Átak, the asso- ciation of people with disabilities, he is left flabbergasted when a member of the audience asks: “Guðni, where is Davíð?” referring to former Prime Minister Davíð Oddsson, the only can- didate who isn’t there, and one of those who has tried hard to make Guðni lose his cool. Guðni hesitates, then responds: “I can answer many things, but that, I don’t know.” The enquirer isn’t satisfied. “Doesn’t he care about us?” he probes. Guðni argues that people shouldn’t be judged by their attendance records. “It doesn’t matter, I’d rather vote for you anyway,” the man reveals. The president is the face of the nation and the voice of the people, Guðni states. His core message is: “Education, culture, humanity.” When asked on what he would like to focus if elected, he responds: “Help those who need it the most.” He explains that he was extremely shy as a teenager and that he would like to help others, who for some reason are being left behind, to be seen and heard. He wants to meet with people around the country and learn about what’s most important to them. “The president has an indirect influential power. He can launch discussions and in that way put them on the agenda. Wherever he goes, the president takes an invisible lectern with him.” To a nation hurting from the corruption surrounding the 2008 economic crisis and most recently the Panama Papers scandal, Guðni wants to be the president, “who helps unite and restore trust in Iceland.” * Guðni and Eliza with the whole bunch. From left: Rut (Guðni’s daughter from a previous relationship, born in 1994); Donald Gunnar (born in 2009); Duncan Tindur (born in 2007); Sæþór Peter (born in 2011) and Edda Margrét (born in 2013). Family life is important to Guðni, he has stressed, and he will continue cycling with the kids to school. He and Eliza are organized and they will be able to juggle parenthood with holding public office as well, he reasons. It has been decades since children last lived at Bessastaðir.
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