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Wednesday, 04.06.2025, 22:46
Lithuania's Skvernelis - ambitious, emotional officer who swapped police uniform for suit

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"As the minister of the interior, he could feel when
his position should be stated. It was sometimes different than that of heads of
other institutions, for instance, the president or the Seimas speaker. He
simply matched the public sentiments," told political scientist Ramunas Vilpisauskas.
From Police To
Politics
Born in Kaunas, Skvernelis graduated from a secondary school
in Marijamople and from the Vilniaus Gediminas Technical University with a
degree in mechanical engineering. At a later stage, he acquired a degree in law
at the Mykolas Romeris University. He taught at the Police Academy, headed the
public police at the Trakai Police Commissariat and later the traffic police
there.
In 2008, Skvernelis was appointed deputy police chief and
was promoted to Lithuania's police commissioner general in 2011. As the police
chief, he boosted public confidence in the police force, however, discussions
about the police reforms he initiated are still a subject of discussions.
After resignation of Alfonsas
Dailis Barakauskas from in the wake of corruption in 2014, Skvernelis was
appointed to replace him in the post of interior minister.
"It was both joy and understanding of the
responsibility he faced. His understanding that he would have to leave the job
he loved, to take off his uniform, to put his shoulder-straps on a shelf and
wear a costume of a politician. This is a once-in-a-lifetime thing," said
Lithuania's border chief Renatas Pozela
who was in Morocco together with Skvernelis on the day of his appointment.
His fellows in the interior system recall Skvernelis as a
demanding and ambitious chief.
"Whether someone likes it or not, he has always been
emotional and, at the same time, a very tough chief – he used to put his
opinion in a very strict manner. I have never seen anyone object him. You
cannot take away his ambition, determination and pursuit of goals," Sergejus Madalovas, former head of the
Public Security Service, told LETA/BNS.
Conflicts in Politics
During his term as the interior minister, Skvernelis topped
Lithuania's popularity lists and constantly compete with President Dalia Grybauskaite and Prime Minister Algirdas Butkevicius for the leading
position among the most popular politicians.
Skvernelis on a few occasions made front-page headlines over
conflicts with then Parliamentary Speaker Loreta
Grauziniene – through his spokesman he has dubbed her as coming out of
nowhere, a phrase his spokesman later insisted on having invented himself. The
interior minister has also said questions from Grauziniene kept him from doing
his work amid the Vilnius police efforts to catch a dangerous fugitive armed
with an automatic weapon.
After Lithuanian border guards gunned down a suspected
smuggler two and a half years ago, he publicly rebuffed Grybauskaite who had
accused the officer of excess weapon use: "Never kneel before injustice,
violence, pressure and fear," he wrote in an emotional letter to the
country's officers.
In the run-up to the 2016 Seimas elections, a few political
parties started inviting him to their candidate lists, however, Skvernelis
decided in spring to lead the list of the Lithuanian Peasant and Green Union,
resigning from the Interior Ministry.
"When you choose a party you go with, you chose a
political force where you can play the first violin. We and the Liberals
already have enough leaders and he could hardly expect to be the first violin
with us. This is the main reason why he chose the Peasants and Greens. It is a
logical and pragmatic move," Algirdas
Sysas, former chief of the election bureau of the Social Democratic Party,
told LETA/BNS.
During the election campaign, Skvernelis accentuated social
issues and spoke in support of higher taxes in an effort to help the most
impoverished part of the population. The politician said he would also support
initiatives to lower the value-added tax on the most necessary food products, however
is against rapid growth of minimum monthly wages.
On some issues, he is more liberal than the party's leader Ramunas Karbauskis - Skvernelis backs
legalization of same-sex partnership and is against abortion bans.
Gardening and
Basketball
Skvernelis, 46, is not confident about his command of the
English language, noting he was working on improving his skills. During a
broadcast a few months ago, he refused to give an English-language answer to Andrius Tapinas to a question about the
three main goals to be pursued by the Peasant and Green Union, should it win
enough mandates to form the ruling coalition.
In his free time, Skvernelis enjoys watching basketball
games and working in the garden, often humming songs by Lithuania's legendary
music bands Foje and Antis. His library mainly consists of history books, while
Three Comrades by Erich Maria Remarque is his favorite book, telling about
lives of World War One veterans in Berlin of 1928.
In the last months of the 2016 parliamentary election campaign,
Skvernelis had to shift his focus to his family after birth of his son. The
candidate also has a small daughter. This is his second marriage.