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First Balkenende cabinet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

First Balkenende cabinet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Netherlands

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the Netherlands



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The first cabinet of Jan Peter Balkenende was in office in the Netherlands from July 22, 2002 until October 16 of the same year. The term of 87 days (counting the first and last days in full and excluding its "caretaker" function that continued for months afterwards) was the shortest since the fifth cabinet of Hendrikus Colijn (July 25, 1939 - August 10, 1939).

After the May 15, 2002 elections the division of the 150 seats in the lower house (Tweede Kamer) was:

Christen Democratisch Appèl (CDA) 43
Lijst Pim Fortuyn (LPF) 26
Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie (VVD) 24
Partij van de Arbeid (PvdA) 23
GroenLinks (GL) 10
Socialistische Partij (SP) 9
Democraten 66 (D66) 7
ChristenUnie (CU) 4
Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij (SGP) 2
Leefbaar Nederland (LN) 2

On May 17 Queen Beatrix appointed Piet Hein Donner, a CDA member of the Raad van State as "informer", to investigate the possibilities for a new government. A coalition between CDA, LPF and VVD was established relatively quickly, despite some initial resistance by the VVD. By July 4 a detailed coalition agreement had been drawn up and the Queen appointed Jan Peter Balkenende, the lijsttrekker for the CDA, to form a new cabinet. The cabinet was named on July 16 and was sworn in on July 22. The cabinet Balkenende-1 comprised 14 ministers and 14 state secretaries, with each post allocated to one of the coalition parties. Each of the ministers headed a department, with the exception of one "minister without a portfolio" to deal with "foreigners policy and integration", accommodated by the Ministry of Justice.

Contents

[edit] Incidents and Scandals

The First Balkenende Cabinet was very unstable from the beginning. Elections had been held in the very recent aftermath of the assassination of Pim Fortuyn, the leader of the newly established LPF. Emotions in the Netherlands, a country where the last political assassination had taken place in 1584 with the murder of Prince William of Orange, had run very high. The LPF was catapulted into enormous wins and the party proved unprepared for cabinet participation. Personality conflicts and the general inexperience of LPF cabinet members led to the rapid implosion of the cabinet. After the ensuing new elections, the LPF lost two-thirds of its seats in the Dutch Lower House and the party has since been disbanded on a national level.

[edit] Resignation of Undersecretary Bijlhout

The first scandal in the new government came only nine ours after it took office. Philomena Bijlhout, the staatssecretaris (Undersecretary) for Social Affairs and Work Opportunity appointed by the LPF, resigned after evidence was presented that she had been a member of a militia of Surinamese military coup leader Dési Bouterse in 1982 and 1983, during the period when the militia had committed the political murders known as the "December Murders."

[edit] Power Struggles within the LPF and the Resignation of the Cabinet

In the months following the election, the LPF was beset by power struggles between various factions. A big incident was when minister Nawijn declared to be in favour of the death penalty. The cabinet was officially opposed to the death penalty. Nawijn responded that he made his remark as leader of the LPF. The party in its turn declared that it was opposed to the death penalty. Nawijn was highly criticised when he declared that it was a personal remark, because it was normal that a minister in a coalition cabinet could make remarks as political party member outside his ministerial responsibility.

A huge incident between ministers of the LPF, Bomhoff and Heinsbroek led to the resignation of the cabinet. A bell used by Vice-Prime Minister Bomhoff to indicate he wanted to speak during cabinet meetings annoyed Minister Heinsbroek and a row ensued which dragged on for several weeks. The other LPF ministers decided not to support Bomhoff and Heinsbroek anymore. They made this decision during the funeral of Prince-Consort Claus von Amsberg, who had died on October 6, 2002. Finance Minister Gerrit Zalm was so outraged at their breach of decorum during a royal funeral that he demanded new elections. He no longer wanted to be in a government with the LPF. Meetings with the Queen did not take place until the week after the resignation, since she had travelled to Italy immediately after the funeral. On October 21 she accepted the resignation and new elections were called for January 22, 2003. The cabinet remained in place as a "caretaker" administration, without Bomhoff and Heinsbroek, until the elections and formation of a new cabinet.

On December 12, 2002, Benk Korthals resigned as caretaker Minister of Defence after a commission of inquiry into building industry fraud accused him of giving false information to the Lower House during the previous cabinet. After resigning he said he still denied the allegations.

[edit] Cabinet actions

  • Revoked a planned ban on mink farming initiated by the previous cabinet[1]
  • Approved an expansion of the European Union.
  • Support for the United States in its plan to invade Iraq.
  • Cuts to a subsidised jobs scheme of Ad Melkert, the Melkertbanen.
  • Reorganisation of defence (and budget cuts?) involving 4800 job losses [2]
  • Reduction of spending on public transport of 39 million euros in 2003 (originally to be 60 million) [3]
  • Cuts to the budgets of most government departments, but with increased spending in some areas.

[edit] Ministers

Prime Minister, General Affairs (CDA) Jan Peter Balkenende
Vice Prime Minister, Health and Sport (LPF) Eduard Bomhoff (resigned October 16, 2002, after which Aart Jan de Geus added this portfolio).
Vice Prime Minister, Internal Affairs and Kingdom Relations (VVD) Johan Remkes
Foreign Affairs (CDA) Jaap de Hoop Scheffer
Justice (CDA) Piet Hein Donner
Education, Culture and Sciences (CDA) Maria van der Hoeven
Finances (VVD) Hans Hoogervorst
Defence (VVD) Benk Korthals (resigned December 12, 2002, after which Henk Kamp added this portfolio)
Housing, Spatial Planning and Environment (VVD) Henk Kamp
Transport and Water (LPF) Roelf de Boer
Economic Affairs, External Trade (*) (LPF) Herman Heinsbroek (resigned October 16, 2002, after which Hans Hoogervorst added this portfolio).
Agriculture, Nature Management and Fishery (CDA) Cees Veerman
Social Affairs and Work Opportunity (CDA) Aart Jan de Geus
Foreigners Policy and Integration (LPF) Hilbrand Nawijn

[edit] Staatssecretaris

Foreign Affairs (Development Cooperation), Minister of Development Cooperation (*) (CDA) A.M.A. van Ardenne-van der Hoeven
Foreign Affairs (European Affairs) (VVD) Atzo Nicolaï
Internal Affairs and Kingdom Relations (LPF) R.H. Hessing
Education, Culture and Sciences (Science and Higher Education) (VVD) A.D.S. M. Nijs
Education, Culture and Sciences (Culture and Media) (LPF) C.H.J. van Leeuwen
Finances (LPF) S.R.A. van Eijck
Defence (CDA) C. van der Knaap
Housing, Spacial Planning and Environment (CDA) P.B.L.A van Geel
Transport and Water (VVD) M.H. Schultz van Haegen-Maas Geesteranus
Economic Affairs (CDA), Minister of Foreign Trade (*) Joop Wijn
Agriculture, Nature Management and Fishery (LPF) B.J. Odink
Social Affairs and Work Opportunity (VVD) M. Rutte
Social Affairs and Work Opportunity (Emancipation and Family Affairs) (LPF) Philomena Bijlhout (resigned July 22, 2002), Khee Liang Phoa (from September 9, 2002)
Health and Sport (CDA) Clemence Ross-Van Dorp

(*) Alternative title that can be used outside the Netherlands.

[edit] Sources

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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