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Santer-Poos III Government

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Santer-Poos III Government

Cabinet of Luxembourg
1994-1995
Santer (left) and Poos (right) in 1989
Date formed13 July 1994
Date dissolved20 January 1995
(6 months and 1 week)
People and organisations
Grand DukeJean
Prime MinisterJacques Santer
Deputy Prime MinisterJacques Poos
Total no. of members12
Member parties  CSV
  LSAP
Status in legislatureCentre-left to centre-right coalition government
Opposition parties  DP
  ADR
  GAP
  GLEI
Opposition leaderHenri Grethen[a]
History
Election1994 general election
Legislature term29th Legislature of the Chamber of Deputies
PredecessorSanter-Poos II Government
SuccessorJuncker–Poos Government

The Santer-Poos III Government was the government of Luxembourg between 13 July 1994 and 20 January 1995. It was the third of three led by, and named after, Prime Minister Jacques Santer. Throughout the ministry, the Deputy Prime Minister was Jacques Poos.

It was formed following the general election of 1994. It represented a coalition between Santer's Christian Social People's Party (CSV) and Poos' Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (LSAP), which had once more been elected the largest and second-largest parties in the legislature.

Ministers

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Name Portrait Party Office[1]: 219 
Jacques Santer CSV Prime Minister
Minister for the Treasury
Minister for Cultural Affairs
Jacques Poos LSAP Deputy Prime Minister
Minister for Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade, and Cooperation
Fernand Boden CSV Minister for the Family and Solidarity
Minister for the Middle Class and Tourism
Minister for the Civil Service
Jean Spautz CSV Minister for the Interior
Minister for Housing
Jean-Claude Juncker LSAP Minister for Finances
Minister for Work
Marc Fischbach CSV Minister for National Education and Scientific Research
Minister for Justice
Johny Lahure LSAP Minister for Health
Minister for the Environment
Robert Goebbels LSAP Minister for the Economy
Minister for Public Works
Minister for Energy
Alex Bodry LSAP Minister for Planning
Minister for the Police Force
Minister for Physical Education and Sport
Minister for Youth
Marie-Josée Jacobs CSV Minister for Agriculture, Viticulture, and Rural Development
Minister-Delegate for Cultural Affairs
Mady Delvaux-Stehres LSAP Minister for Social Security
Minister for Transport
Minister for Communications
Georges Wohlfart LSAP Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade, and Cooperation
Source: Service Information et Presse

Formation

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At the general election of 12 June 1994, the CSV and the LSAP remained the two strongest parties and received 21 and 17 seats respectively.[1]: 218  The third-placed party, the Democratic Party, received only 12 Deputies in the new Chamber.[1]: 218  The Greens (Déi Gréng GLEI/GAP) and the "action committee" ADR (Aktiounskomitee fir Demokratie a Rentegerechtegkeet) each received five representatives in the parliament.[1]: 218  The CSV and LSAP decided to continue their coalition: the Santer-Poos partnership entered its third legislative period.[1]: 218 

The government was later reshuffled after Jacques Santer was appointed president of the European Commission on 23 January 1995.[1]: 218  The European Council of heads of state and of government, in Brussels on 15 July 1994, had designated the Luxembourgish Prime Minister to this post to succeed Jacques Delors.[1]: 218 

Foreign policy

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The government's policy was marked by the implementation of the Maastricht Treaty and the enlargement and deepening of the European Union.[1]: 220  It aimed to reaffirm Luxembourg's place in a united Europe that was respectful of differences.[1]: 220  Luxembourg wanted to be a full partner, while preserving its identity and specificity.[1]: 220 

Domestic policy

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Domestically, the government was faced with a considerable need for public investments, especially with regards to roads, schools infrastructure, the hospital sector and refuse collection and waste-water infrastructure.[1]: 220  The key points of government action were, apart from improvement of infrastructure, educational reform, environmental protection, the modernisation of public administration as well as family policy and social security.[1]: 220 

References

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  1. ^ De facto leader of the opposition as the leader of the largest opposition group in the Chamber of Deputes.
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Thewes, Guy (2011). Les gouvernements du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg depuis 1848 (PDF) (in French). Luxembourg City: Service information et presse du gouvernement. ISBN 978-2-87999-212-9.