Jump to content

Solberg's Cabinet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by SporkBot (talk | contribs) at 22:39, 22 December 2016 (Repair duplicate template arguments). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Solberg's Cabinet

61st Cabinet of Norway
Incumbent
Date formed16 October 2013
People and organisations
Head of stateHarald V of Norway
Head of governmentErna Solberg
No. of ministers18 (2013-2015)
20 (2015- )
Member partyConservative Party
Progress Party
Status in legislatureMinority government
History
Election2013 parliamentary election
Legislature term2013-2017
PredecessorStoltenberg's Second Cabinet

Solberg's Cabinet is the incumbent Government of the Kingdom of Norway. The Government was appointed by the King on 16 October 2013 following the parliamentary election on 9 September. It succeeded Stoltenberg's Second Cabinet. On 16 December 2015, the cabinet was re-shuffled.

Parliamentary support

The Government is a Centre-right coalition of the Conservative Party and the Progress Party, relying on parliamentary support from the Liberal Party and the Christian Democratic Party through a separate agreement giving them influence on policy.[1] The Government is the first in which the Progress Party participates.

Name

By convention, a Norwegian government is usually named after the Prime Minister, in casu the Solberg Cabinet. The Government, however, has officially referred to itself as the Høyre Frp Cabinet. Informally, it is called the Blue Cabinet and even the Blue Blue Cabinet, referring to Høyre's light blue and the Progress Party's dark blue party colour, respectively.

Members

On 16 October 2013, Erna Solberg's cabinet ministers were formally appointed by the King Harald V.[2]

The Cabinet has 18 ministers; two fewer than the previous Stoltenberg cabinet. It has eleven ministers from the Conservatives and seven from Progress, reflecting the parties numerical strength in Parliament.[3]

The cabinet has nine men and nine women. The average age at the start is 43. Six ministers have studies in economics, four are jurists and four have studies in the humanities or social sciences.[4]

Seven ministers hail from Western Norway,[4] including Listhaug who now represents Oslo. Seven ministers (including Listhaug) represent Eastern Norway, three ministers represent Trøndelag, one Northern Norway and one Sørlandet. Siv Jensen is the only minister who was born and grew up in Oslo.[4]

On 16 December 2015, Solberg made a cabinet reshuffle. The reshuffle increased the number of cabinet ministers from 18 to 20.

Three cabinet ministers were replaced on 20 December 2016.

Portfolio Minister Took office Left office Party
Prime Minister16 October 2013Incumbent Conservative
Minister at the Office of the Prime Minister,
responsible for EEA Affairs and EU Relations,
also Chief of Staff at the Office of the Prime Minister
16 October 201316 December 2015
(became Minister of Climate
and the Environment)
 Conservative
Minister of Finance16 October 2013Incumbent Progress
Minister of Local Government and Modernisation16 October 2013Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Defence16 October 2013Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Foreign Affairs16 October 2013Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Trade and Industry16 October 2013Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Transport and Communications16 October 2013Incumbent Progress
Minister of Agriculture16 October 201316 December 2015
(became Minister of Migration
and Integration)
 Progress
16 December 2015Incumbent Progress
Minister of Fisheries
also Minister for Nordic Cooperation Affairs
16 October 201316 December 2015 (became
Minister of European Affairs
and Nordic Cooperation)
 Conservative
16 December 2015Incumbent Progress
Minister of Justice and Public Security16 October 201320 December 2016 Progress
20 December 2016Incumbent Progress
Minister of Education and Research16 October 2013Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Children, Equality and Social Inclusion16 October 2013Incumbent Progress
Minister of Petroleum and Energy16 October 201320 December 2016 Progress
20 December 2016Incumbent Progress
Minister of Health and Care Services16 October 2013Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Labour and Social Affairs16 October 201316 December 2015 Progress
16 December 2015Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Culture and Church Affairs16 October 201316 December 2015 Conservative
16 December 2015Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Climate and the Environment16 October 201316 December 2015 Conservative
Vidar Helgesen
16 December 2015 (was
Minister at the Office
of the Prime Minister)
Incumbent Conservative
Minister of Migration and Integration
Sylvi Listhaug
16 December 2015 (was
Minister of Agriculture)
Incumbent Progress
Minister of European Affairs and Nordic Cooperation
Elisabeth Aspaker
16 December 2015 (was
Minister of Fisheries)
20 December 2016 Conservative
20 December 2016Incumbent Conservative

References

  1. ^ Conservative Party and Progress Party to form a coalition government. 2013-09-30 Aftenposten
  2. ^ Official news release from the Cabinet 16 October 2013. Retrieved 17 October 2013.
  3. ^ NTB (14 October 2013)Frp får landbruksministeren Aftenposten. Retrieved 17 October 2013 Template:No icon
  4. ^ a b c John Olav Egeland (16 October 2013) En regjering for markedsstaten Aftenposten. Retrieved 17 October 2013 Template:No icon