Kokkinakis ministry: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
{{Leander Kokkinakis sidebar}} | {{Leander Kokkinakis sidebar}} | ||
The '''Kokkinakis ministry''' ([[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]]) was the 48th ministry of the [[Satavia|Government of Satavia]]. It was lead by the country's 30th Prime Minister, and second Prime Minister since the restoration of democratic rule in 1976. The Kokkinakis ministry was formed after [[Leander Kokkinkais]] | The '''Kokkinakis ministry''' ([[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]]) was the 48th ministry of the [[Satavia|Government of Satavia]]. It was lead by the country's 30th Prime Minister, and second Prime Minister since the restoration of democratic rule in 1976. The Kokkinakis ministry was formed after [[Leander Kokkinkais]] won the [[1984 Liberal Party leadership spill]] and replaced outgoing Prme Minister [[Eric Edwards]]. It was re-elected at the [[1984 Satavian federal election|1984 federal election]] and ended after Kokkinakis' resignation as a result of the [[Scott Affair]]. | ||
==Ministry== | ==Ministry== |
Revision as of 12:30, 8 July 2023
Kokkinakis ministry | |
---|---|
48th Cabinet of Satavia | |
Date formed | 4 June 1984 |
Date dissolved | 3 April 1987 |
People | |
President | Willem Steyn |
Prime Minister | Leander Kokkinakis |
No. of ministers | 14 |
Member party | Liberal Party |
Status in legislature | Majority government |
Opposition party | Conservative & Country Party |
Opposition leader | Ben De Villiers |
History | |
Election(s) | 18 August 1984 |
Legislature term(s) | 32nd |
Predecessor | Second Edwards ministry |
Successor | Dumfries ministry |
| ||
---|---|---|
Term of government (1984-1987)
|
||
The Kokkinakis ministry (Liberal) was the 48th ministry of the Government of Satavia. It was lead by the country's 30th Prime Minister, and second Prime Minister since the restoration of democratic rule in 1976. The Kokkinakis ministry was formed after Leander Kokkinkais won the 1984 Liberal Party leadership spill and replaced outgoing Prme Minister Eric Edwards. It was re-elected at the 1984 federal election and ended after Kokkinakis' resignation as a result of the Scott Affair.