Cabinet Beck V
Cabinet Beck V | |
---|---|
State government of Rhineland-Palatinate | |
Prime Minister | Kurt Beck |
choice | 2011 |
Legislative period | 16. |
education | May 18, 2011 |
The End | January 16, 2013 |
Duration | 1 year and 243 days |
predecessor | Cabinet Beck IV |
successor | Dreyer I cabinet |
composition | |
Party (s) | SPD and Alliance 90 / The Greens |
minister | 10 |
representation | |
Rhineland-Palatinate Landtag | 60/101 |
The Beck V cabinet formed the state government of Rhineland-Palatinate from May 18, 2011 to January 16, 2013 . It was the 22nd cabinet in Rhineland-Palatinate.
cabinet
Initial situation and coalition negotiations
In the 2011 state elections , the SPD lost its previous absolute majority of seats. As a result, the SPD and Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen started coalition negotiations.
In the distribution of government posts, following the practice of dividing cabinet posts , three of the eight government positions (state of Beck IV cabinet including Prime Minister at the end of the legislative period) would have had to be filled by Green politicians, i.e. three SPD ministers would have to resign without enlarging the government have to.
From the ministers of the Beck IV cabinet, the economics minister Hendrik Hering, known as a networker, was acted as head of the social democratic parliamentary group. There was also a change in the Ministry of Justice after Heinz Georg Bamberger came under fire. After the so-called "son-in-law affair", Interior Minister Karl Peter Bruch did not rule out that he would no longer be a member of the future state government. He will be 65 years old in July 2011.
The Ministry for “Environment, Forests and Consumer Protection”, which was headed by Margit Conrad in the Beck IV cabinet , is considered a classic department of a green party, all the more since this ministry represents the claims against the extension of the service life of German nuclear power plants .
With the conclusion of the coalition negotiations at the beginning of May 2011, the two parties agreed on the division of the departments mentioned under Cabinet . The government was expanded to include two ministerial posts (Minister for Integration and Minister for Federal and European Affairs, the latter based in the State Chancellery). Three of the ten government members are the Greens, seven are the SPD. For the first time, a government in Rhineland-Palatinate has more women (six) than men (four).
At party conferences on May 7th (SPD) and May 8th (Greens) 2011, the coalition parties confirmed the coalition agreement and thus also the division of the cabinet. On May 18, 2011, Kurt Beck was re-elected as Prime Minister and then appointed and sworn in to the government.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Red-green is committed: The Hochmosel Bridge is coming - and the cabinet is available exclusively to Rhein-Zeitung from May 2, 2011
- ↑ State Parliament: ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Julia Klöckner wants to lead the CDU parliamentary group, Hendrik Hering the SPD parliamentary group
- ↑ Interior Minister Bruch is considering quitting
- ↑ Five countries are suing against the extension of the service life of the nuclear power plants: the Federal Council should have approved
- ↑ spiegel-online.de: SPD and Greens approve coalition agreement
- ↑ swr.de: Beck re-elected as Prime Minister