Government of Santer-Poos II

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Santer-Poos II government was a Luxembourg coalition government that formed the Christian Social People's Party (CSV) with the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (LSAP) after the chamber elections on June 18, 1989 . It was sworn in on July 14, 1989 and consisted of ten ministers and two state secretaries.

During Jean-Claude Juncker's hospitalization, Jacques Santer headed the Ministry of Finance from October 30 to November 23, 1989, while Jean Spautz took over the Ministry of Labor.

The government was restructured on December 9, 1992 after René Steichen was appointed Luxembourg Commissioner of the European Commission , where he was responsible for agriculture in the cabinet of President Jacques Delors . Marie-Josée Jacobs took over his Luxembourg ministry .

The government was in office until July 13, 1994 and was replaced by the Santer-Poos III government.

composition

  • Jacques Santer (CSV): Prime Minister; Minister of State; Budget minister; Minister of Culture
  • Jacques Poos (LSAP): Deputy Prime Minister; Foreign Minister, Minister for Foreign Trade and Cooperation; Defense Minister
  • Fernand Boden (CSV): Minister for Family; Minister for Small Business and Tourism
  • Jean Spautz (CSV): Minister of the Interior; Housing Minister and Minister for Urban Development
  • Jean-Claude Juncker (CSV): Minister of Finance, Minister of Labor
  • Marc Fischbach (CSV): Minister of Education; Minister of Justice; Minister of Public Administration
  • Johny Lahure (LSAP): Minister of Health; Minister of Social Security, Minister of Sport, Minister of Youth.
  • René Steichen (CSV): Minister for Agriculture, Viticulture and Rural Development; Minister Delegate for Culture and Research (replaced by Marie-Josée Jacobs from December 9, 1992 )
  • Robert Goebbels (LSAP): Minister of Economic Affairs; Minister of Public Works; Minister of transport
  • Alex Bodry (LSAP): Minister for State Planning; Minister of Energy; Minister of Communication.
  • Georges Wohlfart (LSAP): State Secretary for External Relations, Foreign Trade and Cooperation; State Secretary for Defense.
  • Mady Delvaux-Stehres (LSAP): State Secretary for Health and Social Insurance; State Secretary for Sport and Youth.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Les Gouvenements du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg de 1848 . Pp. 209, 211