Background
Gantar was born in the Upper Carniolan village of Gorenja vas near Škofja Loka, Slovenia, in what was then Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
Gantar was born in the Upper Carniolan village of Gorenja vas near Škofja Loka, Slovenia, in what was then Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
After passing the entry exams, he was accepted by the Faculty for Political Sciences at the University of Ljubljana, where he studied sociology.
Between 2008 and 2011, he served as Chairman of the Slovenian National Assembly. Since February 2012, he has been the president of the social liberal extra-parliamentary party Zares. After finishing a professional school for carpentry, he decided to enroll to the university.
During his student years, Gantar was actively involved in student activities.
After graduatring in 1974, he became an assistant professor at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Ljubljana. In 1976, he joined the editorial board of the Journal for the Critique of Science (Časopis za kritiko znanosti, ČKZ), together with people like Mladen Dolar, Slavoj Žižek, and Rado Riha.
He became interested in the classical liberal thought and was especially influenced by the works of the Slovene-born British liberal economist Ljubo Sirc, who strongly criticized the Yugoslav economic model. Upon returning to Ljubljana, he was appointed as the chairman of the Communist Party cell at the Faculty of Social Sciences.
Because of this stand, Gantar was expelled from the Communist Party of Slovenia.
In the late 1980s, he was among the first scholars of contemporary underground social movements in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, together with Frane Adam and Gregor Tomc. He was actively involved in the so-called Slovenian Spring, the mass movement that brought to the democratization and independence of Slovenia. In 1989, he obtained his Doctor of Philosophy in sociology at the University of Zagreb.
In 1990, he joined the Liberal Democratic Party.
The same year, he was elected to the Parliament of Slovenia in the first free elections held in Slovenia after World World War World War II Between 1994 and 2000, he served as the Minister of Environment in the cabinet of Janez Drnovšek. In 2001, he became the Minister of Information Society in the last cabinet led by Janez Drnovšek and later by Anton Rop.
In 2004, the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia was defeated by the centre-right Slovenian Democratic Party. Nevertheless, Gantar was elected to the National Assembly of Slovenia, where he served as an opposition Member of Parliament until 2008.
In 2008, he was re-elected to the Lower House of the Slovenian Parliament.
Soon afterwards, he was elected as its chairman, succeeding France Cukjati. Following the exit of the party Zares from the ruling coalition, Gantar resigned from his position in September 2011 and was succeeded by Ljubo Germič. In February 2012, he replaced Gregor Golobič as the president of Zares.
After his party received only 0.91 % of votes in European Parliament election, he resigned as party president
In 1984, he studied at the University of Essex, where he became acquainted with the liberal critique of Marxism. In 2007, he joined the newly formed social liberal Zares party led by Gregor Golobič.
In 1985, he used this position to defend the essayist Spomenka Hribar, who was accused of denigration of the Yugoslav People"s Liberation War because an essay in which she publicly denounced the mass killings of the Slovene Home Guard after World War Two.
He was among the first to denounce the arrest of four journalist in the JBTZ-trial and was member of the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, the central platform that led the democratization process in Slovenia between 1988 and 1990.