Jospin government

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Jospin government
27th Government of France
Lionel Jospin 29 October-1 November 2000-15.jpg
Lionel Jospin
Date formed2 June 1997
Date dissolved6 May 2002
People and organisations
Head of state Jacques Chirac
Head of government Lionel Jospin
No. of ministers14
Member party Plural Left
Status in legislatureMajority
319 / 577(55%)
History
Predecessor Second Juppé government
Successor First Raffarin government

The Jospin government was the 27th government in the Fifth Republic of France. It was formed on 2 June 1997 by the decree of President Jacques Chirac. [1] It was composed of members from the Socialist Party, Communist Party, Radical Party of the Left, The Greens and Movement of Citizens. It was dissolved on 6 May 2002 with the appointment of Jean-Pierre Raffarin as the new Prime Minister.

Contents

Prime Minister

PostNameParty
Lionel Jospin (4553758629).jpg Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault PS

Ministers

PostNameParty
Martine Aubry Zoom.png Minister of Employment and Solidarity Martine Aubry PS
Elisabeth Guigou.jpg Minister of Justice
Keeper of the Seals
Élisabeth Guigou PS
Claude Allegre, 2009 (cropped).jpg Minister of National Education Claude Allègre PS
Jean-Pierre chevenement et general jb pinatel a Valmy septembre 1989 (cropped).jpg Minister of the Interior Jean-Pierre Chevènement
(until 3 September 1998) [2]
MDC
Jean-Jack Queyranne - Janvier 2012.jpg Jean-Jack Queyranne
(until 30 December 1998) [2]
PS
Jean-Pierre chevenement et general jb pinatel a Valmy septembre 1989 (cropped).jpg Jean-Pierre Chevènement MDC
Hubert Vedrine 2006 01 06.jpg Minister of Foreign Affairs Hubert Védrine PS
Strauss-Kahn cropped.jpg Minister of Economy, Finance and Industry Dominique Strauss-Kahn
(until 2 November 1999) [3]
PS
Flickr - World Economic Forum - Takenaka, Turley, Sautter, Dobbs - Antonovich - Annual Meeting of the New Champions Tianjin 2008 (cropped).jpg Christian Sautter PS
Alain Richard.jpg Minister of Defense Alain Richard PS
Minister of Equipment, Transport and Housing Jean-Claude Gayssot PCF
Catherine Trautmann MEP, Strasbourg - Diliff.jpg Minister of Culture and Communication
Government Spokesperson
(until 30 March 1998) [4]
Catherine Trautmann PS
Tonnerres de Brest 2012 - Louis Le Pensec.jpg Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries Louis Le Pensec
(until 20 October 1998) [5]
PS
Conseillers departementaux des Hautes-Pyrenees - Mme Adeline AYELA - M. Jean GLAVANY (cropped).jpg Jean Glavany PS
Dominique Voynet 2007.jpg Minister of Land Planning and Environment Dominique Voynet LV
Daniel Vaillant 2006 01 06.jpg Minister for the Relation with the Parliament Daniel Vaillant PS
Emile Zuccarelli (France) (MRG).png Minister of Civil Service, State Reform and Decentralization Émile Zuccarelli PRG
Marie-George Buffet Front de Gauche 2009-03-08.jpg Minister of Youth and Sports Marie-George Buffet PCF

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References

  1. "Decret du 4 Juin 1997 Reltif a la Composition du Gouvernement". Légifrance (in French). Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  2. 1 2 "France. Cabinet de Jean-Jack Queyranne, secrétaire d'État à l'Outre-Mer (1997-2000)". FranceArchives (in French). Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  3. "Christian Sautter remplace Dominique Strauss-Kahn". Le Monde.fr (in French). 4 November 1999. Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  4. "Decret du 30 Mars 1998 Relatif a la Composition du Gouvernement". Légifrance (in French). Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  5. "La nomination de M. Glavany à l'agriculture respecte les équilibres du PS". Le Monde.fr (in French). 22 October 1998. Retrieved 6 February 2024.