The First Valls government was the thirty-seventh government in the Fifth Republic of France. It was led by Manuel Valls, who was appointed prime minister of France on 31 March 2014. It was composed of 15 ministers from the Socialist Party (PS) and two from the Radical Party of the Left (PRG).[1] It was the third cabinet declared by President Hollande and replaced the second Ayrault Cabinet. It was established following the 2014 French municipal elections.
First Valls government | |
---|---|
37th Government of France | |
Date formed | 31 March 2014 |
Date dissolved | 25 August 2014 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | François Hollande |
Head of government | Manuel Valls |
No. of ministers | 16 |
Member parties | Socialist Party Radical Party of the Left Walwari |
Status in legislature | Majority 307 / 577 (53%) |
History | |
Predecessor | Second Ayrault government |
Successor | Second Valls government |
Europe Ecology – The Greens, who had been part of the Ayrault Cabinet, chose not to be part of the cabinet. The Socialist Party, with 290 representatives, and the Radical Party of the Left, with 16 representatives, together have 306 of the 577 representatives in the National Assembly.[2]
The cabinet was smaller than the preceding Ayrault Cabinet, and one of the smallest of the fifth republic,[3] having 16 full ministers as opposed to the 20 in the Ayrault Cabinet.[4]
Valls came from the position as minister of the interior, and 14 other ministers also held positions as ministers or junior ministers in the outgoing Ayrault Cabinet. Nine ministers kept the same ministry (with some change in portfolio for some), including Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius and Minister of Defence Jean-Yves Le Drian.
Two ministers had not been part of the Ayrault Cabinet: Ségolène Royal, who had previously been a minister in the Bérégovoy Cabinet and junior minister in the Jospin Cabinet, and François Rebsamen, who came from the position as leader of the Socialist Party group in the French Senate was included in a cabinet for the first time, becoming minister of labour.
Apart from the prime minister, the cabinet had full gender parity, with eight female and eight male ministers.
The average age of government ministers at the time of appointment was 54,[5] with Laurent Fabius at 67 being the oldest and Najat Vallaud-Belkacem at 36 being the youngest.[6]
On 9 April 2014, fourteen secretaries of states were appointed. They included Fleur Pellerin, who was deputy minister in Ayrault's cabinet, and First Secretary of the French Socialist Party Harlem Désir who both became secretaries to the foreign minister.[7]
Born in Barcelona and becoming a French national in 1982, aged 19, Valls is the first French prime minister during the Fifth Republic who was not born a French citizen.[8]
Prime minister
editPost | Name | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister | Manuel Valls | PS |
Ministers
editSecretary of State
editPost | Ministry | Name | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Secretary of State for Relations with Parliament | Prime Minister | Jean-Marie Le Guen | PS | ||
Secretary of State for Foreign Trade and Tourism Promotion | Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Development | Fleur Pellerin | PS | ||
Secretary of State for European Affairs | Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Development | Harlem Désir | PS | ||
Secretary of State Development and Francophonie | Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Development | Annick Girardin | PRG | ||
Secretary of State for Transport, Marine and Fisherie | Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy | Frédéric Cuvillier | PS | ||
Secretary of State for Higher Education and Research | Minister of National Education, Higher Education and Research | Geneviève Fioraso | PS | ||
Secretary of State for the Budget | Minister of Finance and Public Accounts | Christian Eckert | PS | ||
|
Secretary of State for Trade, Crafts, Consumer and Social Economy and Solidarity | Minister of Finance and Public Accounts | Valérie Fourneyron (until 3 June 2014) ; Carole Delga (since 3 June 2014) |
PS | |
State Secretary for Digital Economy | Minister of Finance and Public Accounts | Axelle Lemaire | PS | ||
Secretary of State for Veterans | Defence | Kader Arif | PS | ||
Secretary of State for Territorial Reform | Minister of Decentralisation, State Reform and Public Service | André Vallini | PS | ||
Secretary of State for Family, Elderly People and self | Social Affairs and Health | Laurence Rossignol | PS | ||
State Secretary for the Disabled | Social Affairs and Health | Ségolène Neuville | PS | ||
Secretary of State for Sports | Minister of Women's Rights, Urbanity, Youth Affairs and Sport | Thierry Braillard | PRG |
Changes
edit- On 3 June 2014, Valérie Fourneyron, Secretary of State for Trade, Crafts, Consumer and Social Economy and Solidarity, resigns for health reasons. She is replaced by Carole Delga.
References
edit- ^ Gouvernement Valls : tous les ministres, tous les postes (in French) Le Point. Retrieved 2 April 2014
- ^ Emmanuel Berretta (2 April 2014)Remaniement : Manuel Valls a-t-il une majorité à l'Assemblée ? (in French) Le Point. Retrieved 7 April 2014
- ^ Bastien Bonnefous et al (2 April 2014) Le nouveau gouvernement conforte les poids lourds hollandais (in French) Le Monde. Retrieved 7 March 2014
- ^ Pallaver, Noé, Barra (2 April 2014) Qui sont les seize ministres du gouvernement de Manuel Valls ? (in French) La Voix du Nord
- ^ Geoffroy Clavel, "Gouvernement Valls: une équipe 'de combat' socialiste signée Hollande", (in French) Huffington Post, 2 April 2014.
- ^ "Gouvernement Valls : quel est le parcours des 16 ministres ?", (in French) Sud-Ouest, 2 April 2014
- ^ "Nos portraits des 14 secrétaires d'Etat", (in French) Le Monde, 9 April 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2014
- ^ AFP (2 April 2014) Manuel Valls, premier Premier ministre à ne pas être né français (in French) Libération.