Second Cabinet of Andrej Babiš
Second Cabinet of Andrej Babiš | |
---|---|
23rd Cabinet of the Czech Republic | |
Incumbent | |
Date formed | 27 June 2018 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Miloš Zeman |
Head of government | Andrej Babiš |
Deputy head of government | Jan Hamáček Richard Brabec(2017-2019) |
No. of ministers | 15 |
Ministers removed | 2 |
Total no. of members | 17 |
Member parties | ANO (10 ministers) ČSSD (5 ministers) |
Status in legislature | Minority coalition: 92 / 200 Supported by: 15 / 200
|
Opposition parties | Opposition: 93 / 200
|
History | |
Election | 2017 Czech legislative election |
Predecessor | Andrej Babiš' First Cabinet |
Andrej Babiš' second Cabinet is a centre-left to centre-right minority coalition government, consisting of ANO 2011, a centre-right populist political movement, and the centre-left Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD) with external support from the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSČM).[1][2] The head of government is Andrej Babiš, leader of ANO.
The cabinet was approved by the Chamber of Deputies on 12 July 2018 with a 105–91 vote.[3]
Background
The general election in 2017 was won by ANO, led by Andrej Babiš, who received 78 seats out of 200, becoming the largest party.[4] President Miloš Zeman appointed Babiš to form a government with other parties,[5] but all other parliamentary parties had ruled out forming a coalition government with ANO due to a police investigation into Babiš's alleged subsidy fraud.[6][7] In early 2018, Babiš lost a confidence vote when other parties voted against an ANO-minority government.[7] In 2018, ČSSD decided to hold coalition talks with ANO.[8] In April, the negotiations broke down.[9] President Miloš Zeman subsequently gave Babiš a second chance to form a government.[10] In May, ČSSD accepted talks with ANO, with KSČM also participating in talks to determine the conditions for its support of an ANO-ČSSD government.[11][12][13]
Government formation
The cabinet consists of two coalition parties. ANO, the senior coalition partner in the government, has 10 ministers (including Prime Minister). The Social Democrats have four ministers and hold five ministries, due to the refusal of Czech President Miloš Zeman to appoint Miroslav Poche, the party's nominee for Foreign Minister. Jan Hamáček was appointed as temporary Foreign Minister.[14]
The coalition holds 93 seats in the Chamber of Deputies, eight seats short of a simple majority of 101 seats. The coalition therefore requires the support of another party to provide confidence and supply. KSČM agreed to support the minority government in exchange for cabinet support for several of their demands.[15] With KSČM support, the government controls a majority of 108 seats. On June 15, 2018, following a party referendum,[16] ČSSD formed a coalition with ANO.
The cabinet was approved by the Chamber of Deputies in the early morning of 12 July 2018 with a 105-91 vote, during a parliamentary session which had begun the previous morning.[3] During the debate, deputies from TOP 09 left the Chamber in protest (they later returned to vote against the government) while some deputies from the Christian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party unfurled a soviet flag to protest against the government being supported by the Communist Party. Protests also took place in the streets of Prague against the role of the Communists in the government.
Resignations over plagiarism
Shortly after the formation of the cabinet, two ministers – Taťána Malá of ANO and Petr Krčál of ČSSD – resigned after being accused of plagiarism in their bachelor theses.[17]
On July 24, 2018, another minister, Lubomír Metnar (Independent for ANO) also came under suspicion of plagiarism in his diploma thesis.[18]
Cabinet members
Portfolio | Minister | Party | Office | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took | Left | |||||
Prime Minister | Andrej Babiš | ANO | 6 June 2018 | Incumbent | ||
First Deputy Prime Minister Minister of Interior |
Jan Hamáček | ČSSD | 27 June 2018 | Incumbent | ||
Deputy Prime Minister | Richard Brabec | ANO | 27 June 2018[note 1] | 30 April 2019 | ||
Alena Schillerová | Ind. for ANO | 30 April 2019 | Incumbent | |||
Karel Havlíček | Ind. for ANO | 30 April 2019 | Incumbent | |||
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Jan Hamáček (acting) | ČSSD | 27 June 2018 | 15 October 2018 | ||
Tomáš Petříček | 16 October 2018 | Incumbent | ||||
Minister of Finance | Alena Schillerová | Ind. for ANO | 27 June 2018[note 2] | Incumbent | ||
Minister of Health | Adam Vojtěch | Ind. for ANO | 27 June 2018[note 2] | 21 September 2020 | ||
Roman Prymula | Ind. for ANO | 21 September 2020[19] | Incumbent | |||
Minister of the Environment | Richard Brabec | ANO | 27 June 2018[note 1] | Incumbent | ||
Minister of Labour and Social Affairs | Petr Krčál | ČSSD | 27 June 2018 | 18 July 2018[20] | ||
Jana Maláčová | 30 July 2018[21] | Incumbent | ||||
Minister of Industry and Trade | Marta Nováková | ANO | 27 June 2018 | 30 April 2019 | ||
Karel Havlíček | Ind. for ANO | 30 April 2019[22] | Incumbent | |||
Minister of Justice | Taťána Malá | ANO | 27 June 2018 | 10 July 2018[23] | ||
Jan Kněžínek | Ind. for ANO | 10 July 2018[24] | 30 April 2019[25] | |||
Marie Benešová | Ind. for ANO | 30 April 2019[25] | Incumbent | |||
Minister of Education, Youth and Sport | Robert Plaga | ANO | 27 June 2018[note 2] | Incumbent | ||
Minister of Defence | Lubomír Metnar | Ind. for ANO | 27 June 2018 | Incumbent | ||
Minister of Transport | Dan Ťok | Ind. for ANO | 27 June 2018[note 3] | 30 April 2019[note 2] | ||
Vladimír Kremlík | Ind. for ANO | 30 April 2019[note 2] | 20 January 2020 | |||
Karel Havlíček | Ind. for ANO | 20 January 2020[26] | Incumbent | |||
Minister for Regional Development | Klára Dostálová | Ind. for ANO | 27 June 2018[note 2] | Incumbent | ||
Minister of Agriculture | Miroslav Toman | Ind. for ČSSD | 27 June 2018 | Incumbent | ||
Minister of Culture | Antonín Staněk | ČSSD | 27 June 2018 | 31 July 2019 | ||
Lubomír Zaorálek | ČSSD | 27 August 2019[27] | Incumbent |
Popular mandate
Support for governing parties according to the popular vote.
Member party | Popular vote | Percentage | MPs | Ministers | Leader |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ANO | 1,500,113 | 29.64% | 78 | 10 | Andrej Babiš |
ČSSD | 368,347 | 7.27% | 15 | 5 | Jan Hamáček |
Government | 1,868,460 | 36.91% | 93 | 15 | Andrej Babiš |
KSČM | 393,100 | 7.76% | 15 | 0 | Vojtěch Filip |
Govt. & support | 2,261,560 | 44.67% | 108 | 15 | Andrej Babiš |
Czech Republic | 5,091,065 | 100% | 200 | – |
Confidence motion
Motion of confidence Andrej Babiš (ANO) | ||
Ballot → | 11 July 2018 | |
---|---|---|
Required majority → | 99 out of 196 (simple) | |
105 / 200
| ||
91 / 200
| ||
Abstentions | 0 / 200
| |
4 / 200
| ||
Sources:[28] |
Notes
- ^ a b since 29 January 2014 as Minister of the Environment within Bohuslav Sobotka's Cabinet and Andrej Babiš' First Cabinet, since 24 May 2017 as Deputy PM within Bohuslav Sobotka's Cabinet and Andrej Babiš' First Cabinet
- ^ a b c d e f since 13 December 2017 within Andrej Babiš' First Cabinet
- ^ since 4 December 2014 within Bohuslav Sobotka's Cabinet and Andrej Babiš' First Cabinet
References
- ^ "ČSSD v referendu schválila vládu s ANO. Babiš však ještě nemá vyhráno". iDNES.cz. 2018-06-15. Retrieved 2018-06-24.
- ^ "Babiš je podruhé premiérem. Hájil, že vláda bude opřená o komunisty". iDNES.cz. 2018-06-06. Retrieved 2018-06-24.
- ^ a b "Czech government wins confidence vote backed by Communists". Arab News. 12 July 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
- ^ "Billionaire candidate wins Czech election". 22 October 2017 – via www.bbc.com.
- ^ Editorial, Reuters. "Police charge Czech PM candidate Babis with subsidy fraud".
{{cite web}}
:|first=
has generic name (help) - ^ Editorial, Reuters. "Czech Babis gains possible support in bid for minority government".
{{cite web}}
:|first=
has generic name (help) - ^ a b Muller, Robert. "Czech PM Babis battles fraud charges as cabinet loses confidence vote".
- ^ Editorial, Reuters. "Czech PM will talk exclusively to social democrats on new government".
{{cite web}}
:|first=
has generic name (help) - ^ "Czech coalition talks break down". www.msn.com. Archived from the original on 2018-06-16. Retrieved 2018-09-03.
- ^ "Czech president gives Andrej Babis 2nd chance to form gov't".
- ^ [1][permanent dead link ]
- ^ Editorial, Reuters. "Czech PM Babis wants deal on ministries this week in renewed govt..."
{{cite web}}
:|first=
has generic name (help) - ^ "Czech centre left part agrees to join government". www.usnews.com. 15 June 2018. Retrieved 2020-10-07.
- ^ "Prezident jmenoval vládu bez Pocheho. Půjde ji osobně podpořit před poslance". iDNES.cz. 2018-06-27. Retrieved 2018-06-27.
- ^ "Opposition move could end Czech wait for government". amp.ft.com.
- ^ "VNITROSTRANICKÉ REFERENDUM O VSTUPU DO VLÁDY" (PDF). www.cssd.cz. Retrieved 2020-10-07.
- ^ Second minister resigns over allegations of plagiarism
- ^ "Ministr obrany Metnar má problém s diplomovou prací, řádně necitoval". iDNES.cz. July 24, 2018.
- ^ "Adama Vojtěcha nahradí v čele ministerstva zdravotnictví Prymula. K nelibosti opozice". E15. 21 September 2020. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ Zeman Accepts Krcal’s Resignation, Will Appoint Malacova Next Week
- ^ Incoming labour minister to propose higher parental leave benefit
- ^ "Nastupující ministr průmyslu Havlíček: Mé pracovní tempo je vražedné, za workoholismus se nestydím". iRozhlas.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 2019-04-15.
- ^ televize, Česká. "Ministryně spravedlnosti Malá odstoupí z funkce, obvinění ale považuje za kampaň". ČT24 - Nejdůvěryhodnější zpravodajský web v ČR - Česká televize (in Czech). Retrieved 2018-07-09.
- ^ "News site: Jan Kněžínek to become justice minister". Czech Radio. Retrieved 2018-07-10.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ a b "Doprava, spravedlnost a průmysl mají nové ministry, vláda nové vicepremiéry". ČT24 (in Czech). Retrieved 2019-04-30.
- ^ "Superministr Havlíček přebral dopravu. Kremlík náměstkem nebude, řekl Babiš". SeznamZpravy.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 2020-01-24.
- ^ "Kultura má opět ministra, prezident jmenoval Lubomíra Zaorálka". ČT24 (in Czech). Retrieved 2019-04-30.
- ^ "Hlasování Poslanecké sněmovny - 17/7". www.psp.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 2018-07-12.