From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Ciorbea I Cabinet)
Ciorbea I

112th Cabinet of Romania
Date formed12 December 1996
Date dissolved30 March 1998
People and organisations
Head of state Emil Constantinescu
Head of government Victor Ciorbea
Head of government's history Gavril Dejeu (interim)
Member party PNȚ-CD, PNL, PD, UDMR, PSDR
Status in legislatureMajority
Opposition party PDSR, PRM
Opposition leader Ion Iliescu, Corneliu Vadim Tudor
History
Election26 November 1996
Outgoing election-
Legislature term1996–2000
BudgetTwo
Predecessor Văcăroiu
Successor Vasile

The Ciorbea Cabinet was the 112th cabinet of Romania, formed 12 December 1996 and dissolved 30 March 1998, with Victor Ciorbea as head of government. [1] It was a coalition cabinet formed between the winner of the elections, CDR (Convenția Democrată Română, the Romanian Democratic Convention, which included PNȚCD, PNL, PER), USD (Uniunea Social Democrată, the Social Democratic Union, which included PD and PSDR), and UDMR.

Members

Prime Minister:

Ministers of State:

Ministers:

Minister-Delegates:

References

  1. ^ Lansford, Tom; Muller, Tom (2 April 2012). Political Handbook of the World 2012. SAGE. ISBN  978-1-60871-995-2.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Ciorbea I Cabinet)
Ciorbea I

112th Cabinet of Romania
Date formed12 December 1996
Date dissolved30 March 1998
People and organisations
Head of state Emil Constantinescu
Head of government Victor Ciorbea
Head of government's history Gavril Dejeu (interim)
Member party PNȚ-CD, PNL, PD, UDMR, PSDR
Status in legislatureMajority
Opposition party PDSR, PRM
Opposition leader Ion Iliescu, Corneliu Vadim Tudor
History
Election26 November 1996
Outgoing election-
Legislature term1996–2000
BudgetTwo
Predecessor Văcăroiu
Successor Vasile

The Ciorbea Cabinet was the 112th cabinet of Romania, formed 12 December 1996 and dissolved 30 March 1998, with Victor Ciorbea as head of government. [1] It was a coalition cabinet formed between the winner of the elections, CDR (Convenția Democrată Română, the Romanian Democratic Convention, which included PNȚCD, PNL, PER), USD (Uniunea Social Democrată, the Social Democratic Union, which included PD and PSDR), and UDMR.

Members

Prime Minister:

Ministers of State:

Ministers:

Minister-Delegates:

References

  1. ^ Lansford, Tom; Muller, Tom (2 April 2012). Political Handbook of the World 2012. SAGE. ISBN  978-1-60871-995-2.

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook