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cabinet_fts

Data source: ParlGov · About: simonw/parlgov-datasette

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Link rowid ▼ name description comment cabinet_fts rank
1 1 Gorton I Cabinet ended on 28 February 1968 with the resignation of PM Gorton.   86  
2 2 Krasts II     86  
3 3 Fenech Adami I     86  
4 4 Tarand     86  
5 5 Guterres II     86  
6 6 Van Agt III     86  
7 7 Wilson IV PM Wilson announced his resignation on 16 March 1976 due to health reasons, taking effect on 5 April.   86  
8 8 Sato I     86  
9 9 Drnovsek I PM Drnovšek won a confidence vote (yes: 126; total: 208) on 22 April 1992 and presented his cabinet on 4 May. Cabinet ended with elections on 6 December 1992. majority support through DS seats 86  
10 10 Buhl II Provisional cabinet was formed on 5 May 1945.   86  
11 11 Schluter V PM Schlüter decided to resign over a political scandal involving Tamil refugees ("Tamilsagen") on 18 December 1993.   86  
12 12 Juncker III     86  
13 13 Boross Cabinet won an investiture vote (yes: 201, no: 152, abstain: 5) on 21 December 1993.   86  
14 14 Bratteli I Cabinet resigned on 7 October 1972, effective 18 October, after a referendum on Norwegian membership in the European Communities, put forward by government, failed on 25 September.   86  
15 15 Paroubek PM Paroubek was appointed on 25 April 2005 and cabinet won an investiture vote (yes: 101, no: 99) on 13 May. Cabinet ended with election on 3 June 2006 and resigned on 16 August.   86  
16 16 Falldin II Parliament passed an investiture vote (yes: 170, no: 174, abstain: 1) on 11 October 1979 with no absolute majority against the cabinet. PM Fälldin and Foreign Minister Ullsten, head of the Liberals (FP), resigned on 8 May 1981 following the withdrawal of the Moderate Party (MSP) from the coalition four days earlier. Negative parliamentarism (Bergmann 1993: 297). 86  
17 17 Messmer III     86  
18 18 Miller II     86  
19 19 Blair II     86  
20 20 Bundesrat 1975     86  
21 21 Barre I PM Barre formally resigned on 30 March 1978.   86  
22 22 Berzins     86  
23 23 Rumor IV     86  
24 24 Trudeau P III Minority cabinet was supported by New Democratic Party (NDP).   86  
25 25 Meciar VI     86  
26 26 Werner IV     86  
27 27 Popescu-Tariceanu II     86  
28 28 Pierlot V Provisional cabinet continued in office on 12 December 1944.   86  
29 29 Erhard I     86  
30 30 Faure I   Party "Payson" could not be identified. 86  
31 31 Simitis II Cabinet won an investiture vote (yes: 161, no: 134, absent: 5) on 12 October 1996.   86  
32 32 Sorsa V     86  
33 33 Marijnen     86  
34 34 Eriksen I Cabinet ended with elections on 21 April 1953 and resigned a day after the election.   86  
35 35 Gonzalez III   Socialist Party (PSOE) had a working majority because the four deputies from the Basque nationalist Herri Batasuna (HB) boycotted parliament (Hamann 1999, 121). 86  
36 36 Bundesrat 1995     86  
37 37 Papandreou A III     86  
38 38 Spaak IV   Not coded in Müller/Strom as a distinct cabinet. However, the king had accepted the formal resignation of the preceding cabinet (De Winter 2000, 320). 86  
39 39 Holkeri II     86  
40 40 Godmanis II   The international financial crisis caused major political turmoil in Latvia. Godmanis survived a confidence vote (yes: 51, no: 40) on 3 February 2009. However, following coalition internal conflicts the People's Party as well as the Green and Farmers' Union demanded the resignation of the prime minister and he stepped down on 20 February 2009. 86  
41 41 Holyoake IV     86  
42 42 Bondevik I Government was appointed on 17 October 1997. Cabinet resigned on 9 March 2000, effective 17 March, after losing a confidence vote (yes: 71, no: 81, abstain: 13) on environmental legislation.   86  
43 43 Villepin     86  
44 44 Vagnorius II PM Vagnorius won an investiture vote (yes: 95, no: 5, abstain: 20) on 27 November 1996 and cabinet (yes: 87, no: 21) on 10 December. Cabinet resigned on 26 February 1998, a constitutional requirement after a presidential election.   86  
45 45 Ikeda II     86  
46 46 Keating II     86  
47 47 Jorgensen II Minority cabinet was supported by Centre Democrats (CD), Danish Social-Liberal Party (RV), Conservatives (KF), Christian People's Party (KrF)   86  
48 48 Hansen II     86  
49 49 Blum     86  
50 50 Lyng Cabinet was appointed on 28 August 1963. Cabinet lost a confidence vote on 20 September (yes: 74, no: 76) and resigned on 25 September.   86  
51 51 Haughey II     86  
52 52 Chretien III     86  
53 53 Bratteli II Cabinet was appointed on 16 October 1973. PM Bratteli announced his resignation intend in September 1975 and formally resigned on 9 January 1976, effective 15 January.   86  
54 54 Schluter IV     86  
55 55 Gerhardsen II     86  
56 56 Miki     86  
57 57 Papandreou A II     86  
58 58 Gerhardsen V     86  
59 59 Adenauer VII Adenauer lost support of his party and was forced to resign on 11 November 1963.   86  
60 60 Douglas-Home     86  
61 61 Nastase I PM Nastase was appointed on 20 December 2000. The cabinet won an investiture vote (yes: 314, no 145) on 28 December in a joint sitting of parliament and was appointed the same day. Minority cabinet was supported by Liberals (PNL) and ethnic Hungarians (UDMR). Cabinet ended with a reshuffle on 19 June 2003 to reduce cabinet size.   86  
62 62 Balkenende IV   D66 withdrew from the Balkenende II government and Balkenende III caretaker cabinet came into office to prepare the 2006 election and the 2007 budget. 86  
63 63 Holland II     86  
64 64 Holt II Cabinet ended on 18 December 1967 after PM Holt presumed drowned in a swimming accident.   86  
65 65 Suchocka I Cabinet was nominated on 8 July 1992 and won an investiture vote on 11 July (yes: 226, no: 124, abstain: 28). Cabinet resigned on 28 May 1993 after losing a confidence vote (yes: 198, no: 223, abstain: 24) by one vote.   86  
66 66 Balkenende V   The government collapsed on 20 February 2010 over disagreements on extending troop deployments in Afghanistan. PvdA pulled out of the coalition and Queen Beatrix accepted the resignation of their ministers on 23 February. 86  
67 67 Trudeau P V     86  
68 68 Rasmussen L I PM Rasmussen called an early election on 26 August 2011.   86  
69 69 Barre II     86  
70 70 Ciorbea Parties signed a coalition agreement on 6 December 1996. Cabinet won an investiture vote (yes: 316, no: 152) on 11 December in a joint sitting of parliament and was appointed the day after. Cabinet ended on 29 January 1998 when Democrats (PD) withdrew. PM Ciorbea resigned on 30 March 1998 and interim PM Dejeu was appointed the same day.   86  
71 71 Papandreou A IV Cabinet won an investiture vote (yes: 170, no: 129, absent: 1) on 25 October 1993.   86  
72 72 Bielecki     86  
73 73 Tosovsky Interim PM Tosovsky and the caretaker cabinet were appointed on 2 January 1998 and won an investiture vote on 28 January (yes: 123, no 71, abstain: 3). Minority cabinet was supported by Czech Social Democratic Party (CSSD). Cabinet ended with an early election on 20 June 1998.   86  
74 74 Haughey III     86  
75 75 Fagerholm I     86  
76 76 Bundesrat 1971     86  
77 77 Rompuy Cabinet was appointed on 30 December 2008 and won an investiture vote on 2 January 2009 (yes: 88, no: 45). Cabinet ended on 19 November 2009 after PM van Rompuy was chosen as President of the European Council and cabinet resigned on 24 November.   86  
78 78 Brundtland I     86  
79 79 Mintoff V     86  
80 80 Spadolini II Previous cabinet reformed on 23 August 1982. PM Spadolini requested to resign on 11 November 1982 and submitted a second request two days later.   86  
81 81 Merkel I     86  
82 82 Cossiga II     86  
83 83 Fanfani V     86  
84 84 Attlee II     86  
85 85 Colombo     86  
86 86 Fanfani I     86  
87 87 Stankevicius PM Stankevičius won an investiture vote (yes: 70, no: 6) on 15 February 1996. Cabinet ended with election on 20 October 1996.   86  
88 88 Martens VII     86  
89 89 Syse Cabinet was appointed on 16 October 1989. Goverment collapsed on 29 October 1990 over the country's links to the European Community and formally resigned on 3 November.   86  
90 90 Dehaene II     86  
91 91 Beel I     86  
92 92 Kirk     86  
93 93 Gerhardsen VI Gerhardsen lost a confidence vote (yes: 74 no: 76) on 23 August 1963 and the cabinet resigned on 28 August.   86  
94 94 Attlee I     86  
95 95 Lipponen I Cabinet won an investiture vote (yes: 139, no: 49, absent: 11) on 28 April 1995.   86  
96 96 Werner III     86  
97 97 Vacaroiu III     86  
98 98 Martin I     86  
99 99 Queuille III     86  
100 100 Raab II Cabinet was appointed on 29 June 1956. On 9 March 1959, coalition parties agreed to call an early election after disagreement over housing and tax policies. Cabinet ended with an early election on 10 May 1959 and resigned two days later.   86  

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CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE [cabinet_fts] USING FTS5 (
    [name], [description], [comment],
    tokenize='porter',
    content=[cabinet]
);
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