Cabinet of Janez Janša II
Janša II cabinet | |
---|---|
10th Cabinet of Slovenia | |
Date formed | 10 February 2012 |
Date dissolved | 20 March 2013 |
People and organisations | |
Head of government | Janez Janša |
Head of state |
Danilo Türk Borut Pahor |
Member party |
Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia (DeSUS) New Slovenia (NSi) Gregor Virant's Civic List (DL) Slovenian People's Party (SLS) |
History | |
Election(s) | Slovenian parliamentary election, 2011 |
Predecessor | Pahor cabinet |
Successor | Bratušek Cabinet |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Slovenia |
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The Second cabinet of Prime Minister Janez Janša was announced on 10 February 2012. It was the 10th cabinet of Slovenia, that has been formed after the Slovenian parliamentary election, 2011. It was the second government of Janez Jašna, and so he became the second premier to return to the position, after Janez Drnovšek, who was Prime minister four times.
On 5 January 2012, President Danilo Türk proposed Zoran Janković as the candidate to form a government to the National Assembly. Two days before the scheduled voting, the Slovenian Association of Journalists and Commentators, the second largest journalists' association in the country, issued a statement raising the concern that Janković might abuse his power as Prime Minister by curtailing the freedom of media through intimidation.[1] A coalition agreement between PS, SD, DL and DeSUS was initialled on 7 January.[2] However, in the evening of 9 January, DL announced it would not support Janković as the new Prime Minister and also not join his coalition, due to large differences in the programs of the parties.[3] On 11 January, Janković was not elected as the new Prime Minister by the National Assembly. In a secret ballot, his candidacy only gained the support of 42 deputies, two less than expected prior to the voting, and four short of the absolute majority needed for his election.Following the election of Janez Janša as the Prime Minister in the second round of the voting, Positive Slovenia became an opposition party.[4]
Janša's second government did not finish its mandate. The trouble began when Commission for the Prevention of Corruption of the Republic of Slovenia (KPK) published a report of control of the assets of each president of Slovenian parliamentary parties. Janez janša and Zoran Janković did not know how to explain source of all of their assets
Cabinet members came from five parties of the new coalition, until SLS, DL and DeSUS left the coalition on 23 January 2013:
- Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) - 4 Ministers - 6 Ministers at the end of the term
- New Slovenia (NSi) - 1 Minister + 1 Minister without portfolio
- Gregor Virant's Civic List (DL) - 2 Ministers - Left coalition with resignation of both ministers on 23 January 2013
- Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia (DeSUS) - 2 Ministers - Left coalition on 23 January 2013 but both ministers stayed on positions
- SLS - 2 Ministers - Left coalition on 23 January 2013 but both ministers stayed on positions
Changes from the preceding cabinet
The number of ministries was reduced from 19 in the Pahor cabinet to 12, due to the crisis. It was the fourth government led by the centre-right party.
List of ministers and portfolios
Composition at the end of the mandate
Minister | Party | Portfolio | Period | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Janez Janša | SDS | Prime Minister | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Minister of Finance | 1 February 2013 – 20 March 2013 | ||||
Karl Erjavec | DeSUS | Minister of Foreign Affairs | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Radovan Žerjav | SLS | Minister of Economy and Technology | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Aleš Hojs | NSi | Minister of Defence | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Tomaž Gantar | DeSUS | Minister of Health | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Zvonko Černač | SDS | Minister of Infrastructure and Urban Planning | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Minister of Justice and Public Administration | 1 February 2013 – 20 March 2013 | ||||
Žiga Turk | SDS | Minister of Education, Culture, Science and Sport | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Franc Bogovič | SLS | Minister of Agriculture and Environment | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Andrej Vizjak | SDS | Minister of Social Affairs | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Vinko Gorenak | SDS | Minister of Interior | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Ljudmila Novak | NSi | Minister without portfolio for Slovenian diaspora | 10 February 2012 – 20 March 2013 | ||
Vlada Republike Slovenije |
Former members
Minister | Party | Portfolio | Period | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Janez Šušteršič | DL | Minister of Finance | 10 February 2012 – 1 February 2013 | ||
Senko Pličanič | DL | Minister of Justice and Public Administration | 10 February 2012 – 1 February 2013 | ||
Source: Vlada Republike Slovenije |
See also
- Slovenian parliamentary election, 2011
- Prime Minister of Slovenia
- Government of Slovenia
- List of cabinets of Slovenia
- Commission for the Prevention of Corruption of the Republic of Slovenia
References
- ↑ "ZNP: Bo Zoran Janković kazensko preganjal novinarje tudi kot premier?". MMC RTV Slovenija. 9 January 2012.
- ↑ "Coalition Agreement Initialled, Final Decision Due Next Week". STA - Slovenska tiskovna agencija. 7 January 2012.
- ↑ "Virant List Says No to Janković and His Coalition (flash)". STA - Slovenska tiskovna agencija. 9 January 2012.
- ↑ "Jankoviću ni uspelo". Finance. 11 January 2012.
External links
- Official website of the Slovenian Government
- Chronology of Slovenian cabinets at vlada.si (Slovene)
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