12th Government of Slovenia explained

Cabinet Name:Cerar cabinet
Cabinet Number:12th
Jurisdiction:Slovenia
Flag Border:true
Incumbent:Dissolved
Date Formed:18 September 2014
Date Dissolved:13 September 2018
Government Head:Prime Minister Miro Cerar (SMC)
State Head:Borut Pahor
Election:2014 election
Previous:Bratušek cabinet

The 12th Government of Slovenia, led by Prime Minister Miro Cerar, was announced on 18 September 2014. It was formed following the 2014 parliamentary election won by the centre-left Party of Miro Cerar; it was the third government formed over four years. At 51 years, Cerar was the second oldest Prime Minister of Slovenia since Independence, following Andrej Bajuk at 56 years. The cabinet had on the day of inauguration the highest number of women ministers representatives, as there were seven women ministers out of sixteen ministers in total. Cerar's cabinet was the highest educated cabinet to date, with six members with a doctorate.

After the resignation of Alenka Bratušek's cabinet, President Borut Pahor determined that the new elections would take place on 13 July 2014. With 34.49% Cerar won by the highest percentage on any parliamentary elections since Independence. It was decided not to cooperate with the Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS), as its leader Janez Janša was sentenced to two years imprisonment.[1] On 28 July 2014 Cerar sent an outline of the coalition agreement to all other parties that attended the coalition talks. The first to agree was the president of Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia (DeSUS) Karel Erjavec, with whom Cerar gathered the necessary 45+ seats in Parliament. The next and last to join the coalition was Dejan Židan with his Social Democrats (SD) party.[2] The coalition agreement was signed on 3 September 2014.

Cabinet members came from three parties of the new coalition:

On the 14 March 2018, following the verdict of the Supreme Court of Slovenia to annul the referendum on the so-called "Second Railway track", Miro Cerar announced his resignation as Prime Minister.

Changes from the preceding cabinet

The number of ministries rose to 16, up from 13 in the preceding Cabinet of Alenka Bratušek. Anja Kopač Mrak, Gorazd Žmavc, Dejan Židan and Karel Erjavec have retained their position.

List of ministers and portfolios

History

Current composition

MinisterPartyPortfolioPeriod
Miro CerarSMCPrime Minister18 September 2014 –
Karl ErjavecDeSUSVice president
Minister of Foreign Affairs
18 September 2014 –
SDVice president
Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Food
18 September 2014 –
Boris KoprivnikarSMCVice president
Minister of Public Administration
18 September 2014 –
Mateja Vraničar ErmanIndependentMinister of Finance21 September 2016 –
Vesna Györkös ŽnidarSMCMinister of Interior18 September 2014 –
Andreja KatičSDMinister of Defence13 May 2015 –
Zdravko PočivalšekSMCMinister of Economic Development and Technology4 December 2014 –
Goran KlemenčičSMCMinister of Justice18 September 2014 –
SDMinister of Labour, Family, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities18 September 2014 –
Milojka Kolar CelarcSMCMinister of Health18 September 2014 –
Tone PeršakDeSUSMinister of Culture20 May 2016 –
Maja Makovec BrenčičSMCMinister of Education, Science and Sport13 May 2015 –
Peter GašperšičSMCMinister of Infrastructure18 September 2014 –
Irena MajcenDeSUSMinister of Environment and Spatial Planning18 September 2014 –
Alenka SmerkoljSMCMinister without Portfolio responsible for Development, Strategic Projects and Cohesion19 November 2014 –
Gorazd ŽmavcDeSUSMinister without portfolio for Slovenian diaspora18 September 2014 –
Source: Vlada Republike Slovenije

Former members

MinisterPartyPortfolioPeriod
Jožef PetrovičSMCMinister of Economic Development and Technology18 September 2014 – 4 December 2014
Violeta BulcSMCMinister without Portfolio responsible for Development, Strategic Projects and Cohesion18 September 2014 – 19 November 2014
Stanka Setnikar CankarSMCMinister of Education, Science and Sport18 September 2014 –6 March 2015
Janko VeberSDMinister of Defence18 September 2014 –13 May 2015
Klavdija MarkežSMCMinister of Education, Science and Sport27 March 2015 –1 April 2015
Julijana Bizjak MlakarDeSUSMinister of Culture18 September 2014 –25 April 2016
Source: Vlada Republike Slovenije

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Cerar zavrnil možnost koalicije z SDS. Siol.net. 7 July 2014. 14 January 2015. 6 October 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141006070606/http://www.siol.net/novice/slovenija/volitve_2014/novice/2014/07/miro_cerar_sds_zavrnitev.aspx. dead.
  2. News: Cerar kljub kritikam koalicijskega osnutka upa na široko koalicijo. Siol.net. 29 July 2014. 14 January 2015. 6 October 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20141006072042/http://www.siol.net/novice/slovenija/2014/07/miro_cerar_pogovori_koalicija_pogodba.aspx. dead.
  3. News: Slovenian economy minister resigns after month in office. MMC RTV Slovenija . 18 October 2014.
  4. News: Koprivec ne bo gospodarski minister, Cerarju bi novo ime iskala SD in DeSUS. MMC RTV Slovenija . 17 November 2014.
  5. News: Počivalšek is confirmed. MMC RTV Slovenija . 3 December 2014.
  6. News: Official: Slovenia names Bulc as a new EU commissioner candidate. MMC RTV Slovenija . 10 October 2014.
  7. News: Potrjena nova ministrica in rebalans proračuna. MMC RTV Slovenija . 19 November 2014.
  8. News: Cerar accepted the resignation offered by Setnikar Cankar. 6 March 2014.
  9. http://www.rtvslo.si/slovenija/markezeva-po-dveh-dneh-dela-odstopila/361857 Markeževa po dveh dneh dela odstopila
  10. News: Bizjak Mlakarjeva odstopila in Cerarjevi vladi očitala, da deluje v interesu lobijev in zanemarja zakone . Reporter.si . sl . Bizjak Mlakar Resigns and Accuses Cerar's Government of the Work in the Interest of Lobbies and of Neglecting the Laws . 25 April 2016 . 2016-05-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160717215157/http://www.reporter.si/slovenija/bizjak-mlakarjeva-odstopila-cerarjevi-vladi-o%C4%8Ditala-da-deluje-v-interesu-lobijev-zanemarja . 2016-07-17 . dead .