Raimo Vistbacka

Raimo Viljam Vistbacka (born 19 October 1945 in Kauhava) is a Finnish politician and former member of the Finnish Parliament. Vistbacka has a master's degree in law (varatuomari) and he was the rural police chief (nimismies) in Alajärvi in 1982–1996. He was first elected to the parliament in 1987, representing the Finns Party's predecessor, the Finnish Rural Party. When the Finns Party was founded in 1995, Vistbacka became the party's first MP. He retired from the parliament in April 2011.

Valtiopäiväneuvos (Counselor of Parliament)
Raimo Vistbacka
Raimo Vistbacka in 2011.
Member of the Parliament of Finland for Vaasa
In office
1987–2011
Minister of Transport
In office
1 October 1989  28 August 1990
Prime MinisterHarri Holkeri
Preceded byPekka Vennamo
Succeeded byIlkka Kanerva
Leader of the Finns Party
In office
1995–1997
Succeeded byTimo Soini
Personal details
Born (1945-10-19) 19 October 1945
Political partyBlue Reform (2017–)
Finns Party (1995–2017)
Finnish Rural Party (until 1995)
OccupationPolitician, police commissioner

In 2010 Vistbacka said that he hopes that the Finns Party will not have more than 10–14 MPs (the total number of MPs in Finland is 200). Vistbacka believed that a bigger parliamentary group cannot be controlled.[1]

Vistbacka left the Finns Party in 2017 and joined the Blue Reform. He was one of the Blue Reform candidates in the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election[2] but was not elected.

References

  1. Tähti, Tuomas (December 15, 2018). "Lauri Heikkilä puhuu!". tuomastahti.wordpress.com (in Finnish). Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  2. Hantula, Riia (March 5, 2019). "Raimo Vistbacka ehdolle eduskuntavaaleihin" (in Finnish). Yleisradio oy. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
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