Kolstad's Cabinet
Government of Norway from 1931 to 1932
Kolstad's Cabinet | |
---|---|
Cabinet of Norway | |
The cabinet in 1931. From left to right: Foreign Minister Birger Braadland, Education Minister Nils Trædal, Prime Minister Peder Kolstad, Justice Minister Asbjørn Lindboe, Defence Minister Vidkun Quisling, Trade Minister Per Larssen, Labour Minister Rasmus Langeland, Agriculture Minister Jon Sundby and Social Affairs Minister Jakob Vik. | |
Date formed | 12 May 1931 |
Date dissolved | 14 March 1932 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Haakon VII of Norway |
Head of government | Peder Kolstad |
Total no. of members | 10 |
Member party | Agrarian Party |
Status in legislature | Minority government 25 / 150 (16.67%)
|
History | |
Legislature term | 1931–1934 |
Predecessor | Mowinckel's Second Cabinet |
Successor | Hundseid's Cabinet |
Kolstad's Cabinet governed Norway from 12 May 1931 to 14 March 1932. The Agrarian Party cabinet was led by Prime Minister Peder Kolstad. It had the following composition:
Cabinet members
Portfolio | Minister | Period[1] | Party |
---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister | Peder Kolstad | Agrarian | |
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Birger Braadland | Agrarian | |
Minister of Defence | Vidkun Quisling | Independent | |
Minister of Finance | Peder Kolstad | – 1 February 1932 | Agrarian |
Jon Sundby | 1 February 1932 – | Agrarian | |
Minister of Trade | Per Larssen | Agrarian | |
Minister of Labour | Rasmus Olsen Langeland | Agrarian | |
Minister of Justice and the Police | Asbjørn Lindboe | Agrarian | |
Minister of Social Affairs | Jakob Nilsson Vik | Agrarian | |
Minister of Agriculture | Jon Sundby | – 25 February 1932 | Agrarian |
Ivar Kirkeby-Garstad | 25 February 1932 – | Agrarian | |
Minister of Church and Education | Nils Trædal | Agrarian |
References
- "Peder Kolstad's Government. 12 May 1931 – 14 March 1932". Government.no. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
Notes
- ^ Unless otherwise noted, the period was 12 May 1931 - 14 March 1932
- v
- t
- e
- Cabinet of 1814 (1814)
- Wedel-Jarlsberg I (1814–36)
- Wedel-Jarlsberg II (1836–44)
- Løvenskiold and Vogt (1844–56)
- Stang (1861–80)
- Selmer (1880–84)
- Schweigaard (1884)
- Sverdrup (1884–89)
- Stang I (1889–91)
- Steen I (1891–93)
- Stang II (1893–95)
- Hagerup I (1895–98)
- Steen II (1898–1902)
- Blehr I (1902–03)
- Hagerup II (1903–05)
- Michelsen (1905–07)
- Løvland (1907–08)
- Knudsen I (1908–10)
- Konow (1910–12)
- Bratlie (1912–13)
- Knudsen II (1913–20)
- Bahr Halvorsen I (1920–21)
- Blehr II (1921–23)
- Bahr Halvorsen II (1923)
- Berge (1923–24)
- Mowinckel I (1924–26)
- Lykke (1926–28)
- Hornsrud (1928)
- Mowinckel II (1928–31)
- Kolstad (1931–32)
- Hundseid (1932–33)
- Mowinckel III (1933–35)
- Nygaardsvold (1935–45)
- Quisling I (1940)
- Administrative Council (1940)
- Terboven (1940–42)
- Quisling II (1942–45)
- Gerhardsen I (1945)
- Gerhardsen II (1945–51)
- Torp (1951–55)
- Gerhardsen III (1955–63)
- Lyng (1963)
- Gerhardsen IV (1963–65)
- Borten (1965–71)
- Bratteli I (1971–72)
- Korvald (1972–73)
- Bratteli II (1973–76)
- Nordli (1976–81)
- Brundtland I (1981)
- Willoch I (1981–83)
- Willoch II (1983–86)
- Brundtland II (1986–89)
- Syse (1989–90)
- Brundtland III (1990–96)
- Jagland (1996–97)
- Bondevik I (1997–2000)
- Stoltenberg I (2000–01)
- Bondevik II (2001–05)
- Stoltenberg II (2005–2013)
- Solberg (2013–2021)
- Støre (2021-)