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First government of Felipe González

1982–1986 government of Spain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

First government of Felipe González
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The first government of Felipe González was formed on 3 December 1982, following the latter's election as Prime Minister of Spain by the Congress of Deputies on 1 December and his swearing-in on 2 December, as a result of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) emerging as the largest parliamentary force at the 1982 Spanish general election.[1] It succeeded the Calvo-Sotelo government and was the Government of Spain from 3 December 1982 to 26 July 1986, a total of 1,331 days, or 3 years, 7 months and 23 days.

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González's first cabinet marked several firsts in Spanish history: it was the first purely left-of-centre government in Spain under the monarchy in Spain, as well as the first one to be set up in peacetime period.[2][3] It comprised members of the PSOE (including its sister party, the Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC), as well as one member from the Democratic Action Party (PAD), which had contested the 1982 election in alliance with the PSOE and would merge into it in January 1983)[4] and one independent.[5][6][7] It was automatically dismissed on 23 June 1986 as a consequence of the 1986 general election, but remained in acting capacity until the next government was sworn in.[8][9][10]

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Investiture

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Council of Ministers

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The Council of Ministers was structured into the offices for the prime minister, the deputy prime minister and 15 ministries.[12] Shortly after coming into office, the Finance and Economy and Trade portfolios were merged into a single Economy and Finance ministry.[13]

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Departmental structure

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Felipe González's first government was organised into several superior and governing units, whose number, powers and hierarchical structure varied depending on the ministerial department.[13][20][21]

Unit/body rank
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See also

Notes

  1. Does not include the Prime Minister.
  2. Including PSC and PAD.
  3. Joined the PSOE upon the dissolution of the PAD in January 1983.[4][17]
  4. On 8 December 1982, the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Economy and Trade were restructured and merged into the newly-established Ministry of Economy and Finance.

References

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