Cabinet of Ivica Račan I

Cabinet of Ivica Račan I
7th Cabinet of Croatia (since 1990)
Date formed 27 January 2000
Date dissolved 30 July 2002
People and organizations
Head of government Ivica Račan
Deputy head of government Željka Antunović, Slavko Linić,
Goran Granić (2000–02), and
Dražen Budiša (2002)
Head of state Stjepan Mesić
Number of ministers 22 (in and attending cabinet)
Ministers removed
(Death/resignation/dismissal)
6
Total number of ministers 28
Member parties Social Democratic Party
Croatian Social Liberal Party
Croatian Peasant Party
Croatian People's Party
Istrian Democratic Assembly
Status in legislature Coalition
Opposition party Croatian Democratic Union
Opposition leader Ivo Sanader
History
Election(s) 3 January 2000
Legislature term(s) 4 years
Previous Cabinet of Zlatko Mateša
Successor Cabinet of Ivica Račan II

The first Cabinet of Prime Minister Ivica Račan was the Croatian Government cabinet announced on 27 January 2000. It was the 7th cabinet of Croatia, and its term ended on 30 July 2002, when it was reconstructed and replaced by Cabinet of Ivica Račan II. The cabinet was formed following the 2000 parliamentary elections, in which the centre-right party Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) was defeated by a broad coalition of several centre-left parties. This marked an end to HDZ's dominance in Croatian politics since the first multi-party election in 1990. However, the period under Prime Minister Račan was marred with constant disagreements among coalition members, which later led to some parties leaving the ruling coalition. This ultimately paved the way for HDZ's return to power in the 2003 parliamentary elections.

Parties included in the original coalition and their quotas:

Ministers

Minister Party Portfolio Term start Term end
Ivica Račan (PM) SDP Prime Minister 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Željka Antunović (D) SDP Deputy Prime Minister 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Slavko Linić (D) SDP Deputy Prime Minister 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Davorko Vidović SDP Labour and Social Welfare 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Mato Crkvenac SDP Finance 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Antun Vujić SDP Culture 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Ivica Pančić SDP Veterans' Affairs 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Tonino Picula SDP Foreign Affairs 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Pave Župan-Rusković SDP Tourism 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Stjepan Ivanišević SDP Justice, Public Administration and Local Self-government 27 January 2000 27 September 2001
Šime Lučin SDP Interior 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Goran Granić (D) HSLS Deputy Prime Minister 27 January 2000 21 March 2002
Alojz Tušek HSLS Maritime Affairs, Transport and Communications 27 January 2000 21 March 2002
Jozo Radoš HSLS Defence 27 January 2000 5 July 2002
Božo Kovačević HSLS Environmental Protection and Physical Planning 27 January 2000 18 July 2003
Hrvoje Kraljević HSLS Science and Technology 27 January 2000 30 July 2002
Goranko Fižulić HSLS Economy 27 January 2000 21 March 2002
Božidar Pankretić HSS Agriculture and Forest Management 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Vladimir Strugar HSS Education and Sports 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Željko Pecek HSS Crafts, Small and Mid-sized Entrepreneurship 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Radimir Čačić HNS Public Works, Construction and Reconstruction 27 January 2000 23 December 2003
Ivan Jakovčić IDS European Integration 27 January 2000 21 June 2001
Ana Stavljenić-Rukavina Non-party Health 27 January 2000 23 October 2001

Changes

Date Gain Loss Note
21 June 2001 IDS President of the Istrian regionalist IDS party Ivan Jakovčić resigns as minister for European integration, after his party decides to leave the ruling coalition. This was the only post in the cabinet held by IDS. The decision was triggered by unresolved differences over the new Istria County statute proposed by IDS which introduced Italian language as co-official at the county level, only to be suspended by justice ministry.[1] After 13 contentious articles of the statute were amended, it was eventually adopted in November 2001.[2] Prior to his resignation, Jakovčić ran in the May 2001 local elections and was appointed Prefect of Istria County in July, a post he held until June 2013.
27 September 2001 SDP Justice minister Stjepan Ivanišević resigns, citing health reasons. According to media reports, he had handed over his resignation in June, but the decision was postponed by prime minister Račan until September.[3] In a 2011 interview Ivanišević said there were also other factors which contributed to his decision, including the disagreements on whether to abolish the Chamber of Counties in what was then a bicameral parliament, and the handling of arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia for Croatian Army generals Rahim Ademi and Ante Gotovina issued in June 2001.[4]
28 September 2001 SDP Senior SDP member Neven Mimica takes office as minister for European integration, succeeding Jakovčić. In addition, SDP's Ingrid Antičević-Marinović is appointed justice minister, replacing fellow SDP member Ivanišević.
23 October 2001 Non-party Ana Stavljenić-Rukavina, non-party health minister appointed within HSLS quota, resigns over a scandal after 23 kidney patients had died in several hospitals around the country after they had received dialysis treatment. Investigation showed that the deaths were caused by faulty dialysis filters produced by Baxter International and imported by Croatian pharmaceutical company Pliva.[5] Her deputy minister, SDP member Rajko Ostojić, also offered to resign, but the offer was rejected by the cabinet.[6]
22 November 2001 HSLS Senior HSLS member and head of Dubrovnik Hospital, Andro Vlahušić, takes office as health minister, succeeding Stavljenić-Rukavina.[7] This increases the number of HSLS seats in the cabinet to seven.
21 March 2002 HSLS HSLS Following his surprise defeat in the January 2000 presidential election, HSLS leader Dražen Budiša returned to his seat in the Croatian parliament, but then resigned from party presidency in July 2001, opposing coalition government's handling of arrest warrants issued by the Hague war crimes tribunal for two Croatian Army generals, and after his stance on the matter was not met with support by fellow party members.[8] Budiša then continued to vocally criticise HSLS members of the cabinet, asking for Deputy Prime Minister Goran Granić to resign.[8] In February 2002 he nevertheless ran in internal party election and assumed party presidency again. This provoked a political crisis over whether the party would stay in the coalition, but in March he replaced Goran Granić as Deputy Prime Minister, a seat reserved for HSLS' coalition quota. In addition, the party decides to change two other ministers in the government, with Mario Kovač replacing Alojz Tušek as minister for maritime affairs, transport and communications, and Hrvoje Vojković replacing Goranko Fižulić as minister of economy.

References

  1. Žužić, Branka (19 August 2001). "Jakovčić se vraća u Vladu kao pokajnik?". Slobodna Dalmacija (in Croatian). Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  2. "Poreč:Obilježen Dan Statuta Istarske županije". Index.hr (in Croatian). 30 March 2004. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  3. "Ministar Ivanišević podnio ostavku" (in Croatian). HRT. 13 June 2001. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  4. Daskalović, Zoran (16 December 2011). "Stjepan Ivanišević: Zbog Nine Pavića su me pritiskali, no otišao sam zbog Haaga". Business.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  5. Kapetanić, Sanja (24 October 2001). "Smijenjena ministrica zdravstva, zatražena smjena ravnateljica Zavoda za javno zdravstvo i KBC-a Rebro". Vjesnik (in Croatian) (Monitor.hr). Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  6. "Vlada prihvatila ostavku ministrice zdravstva" (in Croatian). HRT. 23 October 2001. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  7. Crnjaković, Aleksa (7 November 2001). "Radoš će se kandidirati za predsjednika HSLS-a". Vjesnik (in Croatian) (HSP1861.hr). Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Budiša: SDP preuzeo dominaciju nad koalicijskom petorkom, a Granić treba dati ostavku". Voice of America (in Croatian). 15 December 2001. Retrieved 9 December 2014.

External links