Jiří Paroubek's cabinet
The Government of the Czech Republic from April 25, 2005 to September 4, 2006 was formed by coalition of the Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD), the Christian and Democratic Union - Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU-ČSL) and the Freedom Union - Democratic Union (US-DEU). Two members of the cabinet were women.
Portfolio | Minister | Political party |
---|---|---|
Prime minister | Jiří Paroubek | ČSSD |
Deputy Prime minister and Minister of Finance | Bohuslav Sobotka | ČSSD |
Deputy Prime minister and Minister of Labour and social affairs | Zdeněk Škromach | ČSSD |
Deputy Prime minister and Minister of Justice | Pavel Němec | US-DEU |
Deputy Prime minister and Minister of Transportation | Milan Šimonovský | KDU-ČSL |
Deputy Prime minister for Economics | Jiří Havel | ČSSD |
Minister of Regional development | Radko Martínek | ČSSD |
Minister of the Environment | Libor Ambrozek | KDU-ČSL |
Minister of Interior | František Bublan | ČSSD |
Minister of Informatics | Dana Bérová | US-DEU |
Minister of Industry and Trade | Milan Urban | ČSSD |
Minister of Health | David Rath | ČSSD |
Minister of Agriculture | Jan Mládek | ČSSD |
Minister of Culture | Vítězslav Jandák | ČSSD |
Minister of Defence | Karel Kühnl | US-DEU |
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Cyril Svoboda | KDU-ČSL |
Minister of Education, Youth and Physical training | Petra Buzková | ČSSD |
Minister without Portfolio (Chairman of the legislative council) | Pavel Zářecký | ČSSD |
Jiří Paroubek's cabinet | |
---|---|
15th Cabinet of Czech Republic | |
25 April 2005 - 4 September 2006 | |
Date formed | 25 April 2005 |
Date dissolved | 4 September 2006 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Václav Klaus |
Head of government | Jiří Paroubek |
No. of ministers | 18 |
Member party | ČSSD KDU-ČSL US-DEU |
Status in legislature | Majority (coalition) 101 / 200 (51%) |
Opposition party | ODS KSČM |
Opposition leader | Mirek Topolánek |
History | |
Outgoing election | 2002 Czech legislative election |
Legislature term(s) | 2002-2006 |
Incoming formation | 2005 |
Outgoing formation | 2006 |
Predecessor | Stanislav Gross' Cabinet |
Successor | Mirek Topolánek's First Cabinet |
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.