Lipponen II cabinet
Appearance
Lipponen's Second Cabinet | |
---|---|
67th Cabinet of Finland | |
Date formed | 15 April 1999 |
Date dissolved | 17 April 2003 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Martti Ahtisaari Tarja Halonen |
Head of government | Paavo Lipponen |
Member parties | National Coalition Party Social Democratic Party Green League (Until 31 May 2002) Swedish People's Party Left Alliance |
Status in legislature | 1999-May 2002
Majority 139 / 200 (70%)
June 2002-2003 Majority 128 / 200 (64%)
|
Opposition party | Center Christian League Reform Finns |
History | |
Election | 1999 Finnish parliamentary election |
Predecessor | Paavo Lipponen's first cabinet |
Successor | Anneli Jäätteenmäki's Cabinet |
Paavo Lipponen's second cabinet was the 67th government of Finland. The cabinet was in office from 15 April 1999 to 17 April 2003. It was a center-left majority government, despite the center-right National Coalition Party's inclusion in the cabinet.
The Green League left the government on 31 May 2002 in protest of the government's decision to build the country's fifth nuclear power plant.
Portfolio | Minister | Took office | Left office | Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | SDP | ||
Minister for Foreign Affairs | 15 April 1999 | 25 February 2000 | SDP | ||
25 February 2000 | 17 April 2003 | SDP | |||
Minister of Justice | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | SDP | ||
Minister of the Interior | 15 April 1999 | 1 June 2000 | National Coalition | ||
1 June 2000 | 17 April 2003 | National Coalition | |||
Minister of Defence | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | RKP | ||
Minister of Finance | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | National Coalition | ||
Coordinate Minister of Finance | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | Left Alliance | ||
Minister of Education | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | SDP | ||
Minister of Agriculture and Forestry | 15 April 1999 | 1 February 2002 | Neutral | ||
1 February 2002 | 31 May 2002 | Neutral | |||
Minister of Transport | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | National Coalition | ||
Minister of Transport and Communications | 1 October 2000 | 4 January 2002 | National Coalition | ||
4 January 2002 | 17 April 2003 | National Coalition | |||
Minister of Trade and Industry | 15 April 1999 | 25 February 2000 | SDP | ||
25 February 2000 | 17 April 2003 | SDP | |||
Minister of Social Affairs and Health | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | National Coalition | ||
Minister of Health and Social Services | 15 April 1999 | 25 April 2000 | RKP | ||
25 April 2000 | 19 April 2002 | Green | |||
19 April 2002 | 17 April 2003 | RKP | |||
Minister of Labour | 15 April 1999 | 25 February 2000 | SDP | ||
25 February 2000 | 17 April 2003 | SDP | |||
Minister of the Environment | 15 April 1999 | 31 May 2002 | Green | ||
31 May 2002 | 17 May 2003 | SDP | |||
Minister of Culture | 15 April 1999 | 5 June 2002 | National Coalition | ||
5 June 2002 | 17 April 2003 | National Coalition | |||
Minister of Regional and Municipal Affairs | 15 April 1999 | 17 April 2003 | Left Alliance | ||
Minister of Foreign Trade | 15 April 1999 | 4 January 2002 | National Coalition | ||
4 January 2002 | 17 April 2003 | National Coalition |
References
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