Radoslav Procházka was born on March 31, 1972 in Bratislava. He attended elementary school between 1978 and 1986 at ZŠ Lumumbova school in Bratislava, after this he entered secondary upper high school at Gymnázium Laca Novomeského, located on Tomášikova street in Bratislava. After graduating from high school in 1990 he was enrolled in the Comenius University in Bratislava, studying law. After graduating with a law degree in 1995, he worked as a research fellow with the Law faculty, before moving to the United States and completing his post-gradual study at Yale Law School with an LLM in 1998, and a JSDin 2001. He received a PhD degree from the University of Trnava in 2004 and became an associate professor there in 2005.
Legal career
After graduating from his first tenure at Yale, Procházka worked as a lawyer in the Prague branch of the law firm Hogan & Hartson from 1998 to 1999. From 2001 until 2004 he worked as an adviser and a consultant at the Constitutional Court of the Slovak Republic, at the same time he served as a legal counsel to the Slovak delegation to the European Commission. When Slovakia joined the European Union in 2004 he became the first representative of the State before he served as Slovakia's first representative to the European Court of Justice. He resigned from the justice ministry in 2006, when the highly controversial Štefan Harabin was appointed Minister of Justice by prime ministerRobert Fico.
Political career
In 2010, he was first elected to the Slovak parliament, the National Council of Slovakia while he was a member of the Christian Democratic Movement. During his first years in parliament, Procházka gained a reputation for being a maverick, breaking with party ranks on several occasions. One notable example was in February 2011 when he voted in favour of the opposition Citizen Act when banned the holding of dual citizenship. This caused fury within his own party, and coalition allies called for his expulsion. Procházka who, along with Daniel Lipšic and Jana Žitňanská was regarded by observers as the leaders of the party's ‘young wing’ authored in October 2012 the so-called 'Alfa-platform'. In this doctrine, he called for the total abolition of payroll taxes, installing a single social benefit payment, the financing of basic health care from taxes and a constitutional ban on public finance deficit over a period of a single electoral term. Before the parliamentary election in 2012, Procházka, despite being one of the most popular KDH politicians was not offered a significant nomination, and in February 2013 he officially left the party, continuing in parliament as an independent. The party had refused to discuss or implement the changes he had proposed within his Alfa platform. After the meeting, Procházka said he would never again run on the KDH slate.
2014 presidential election
He was a candidate in the 2014 Slovak presidential election, but did came in third with 21%, behind Robert Fico and Andrej Kiska, thus he did not make it to the second and final round. In late March 2014, he announced that he would give up his parliamentary seat, after the May parliamentary session. He said he was ready to found a new political party and has a network of people who will join in the project.
Leader of Siet'
In the aftermath of the 2014 presidential election, Prochazka founded, along with Andrej Hrnčiar and Miroslav Beblavy a new political party called Siet', He was officially elected leader of the party on 2 September of that year.
Procházka did not candidate for the position of the leader of Sieť again after the 2016 election, rather remaining a regular MP for the party. Shortly after, he announced his complete withdrawal from politics, leaving his MP seat and party membership. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the position of Judge at the CJEU. The Court reasoned that Procházka was rejected due to "undispelled fears about his integrity" despite his other qualities.
Personal life
Radoslav Procházka is married to civil-rights attorney Katarina Procházková. The couple met while Radoslav was teaching at the University of Trnava and Katarina was a law student there, and she currently heads her own civil rights law firm called Attorneys with the people providing pro-bono legal aid. Together they have two children, a son Tadeás, and a daughter Karolina. They reside in the town of Šamorín, a commuting town 26 kilometers outside of Bratislava.