V Constitutional Government of Portugal
Cabinet of Portugal between 1979 and 1980, led by Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo
V Constitutional Government of Portugal | |
---|---|
Cabinet of Portugal | |
Prime Minister Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo | |
Date formed | 1 August 1979 (1979-08-01) |
Date dissolved | 3 January 1980 (1980-01-03) |
People and organisations | |
President of the Republic | António Ramalho Eanes |
Prime Minister | Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo |
History | |
Predecessor | IV Constitutional Government of Portugal |
Successor | VI Constitutional Government of Portugal |
The V Constitutional Government of Portugal (Portuguese: V Governo Constitucional de Portugal) was the fifth government of the Third Portuguese Republic. It had Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo as the Prime Minister and lasted for 5 months and 2 days, from 1 August 1979 to 3 January 1980.
Composition
The government was composed of the Prime Minister, one Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister, and 15 ministries comprising ministers, secretaries and sub-secretaries of state. The government also included the Ministers of the Republic for the Autonomous Regions of Azores and Madeira.[1]
Office | Minister | Party | Start of term | End of term | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister | Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister for Internal Administration | Manuel da Costa Brás | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Social Coordination and Social Affairs | Alfredo Bruto da Costa | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Cultural Coordination, Culture and Science | Adérito Sedas Nunes | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of National Defence | José Loureiro dos Santos | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Foreign Affairs | João de Freitas Cruz | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Justice | Paulo de Sousa Machado | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Finance | António de Sousa Franco | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Economic Coordination and Planning | Carlos Corrêa Gago | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries | Joaquim da Silva Lourenço | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Industry | Fernando Videira | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Commerce and Tourism | Acácio Pereira Magro | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Labour | Jorge Sá Borges | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Transports and Communications | José Marques da Costa | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Housing and Public Works | Mário de Azevedo | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Education | Luís Veiga da Cunha | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of Mass Communication | João Figueiredo | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of the Republic for the Autonomous Region of Azores | Henrique Afonso da Silva Horta | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 | ||
Minister of the Republic for the Autonomous Region of Madeira | Lino Miguel | Independent | 1 August 1979 | 3 January 1980 |
References
- v
- t
- e
- Soares I (1976–78)
- Soares II (1978)
- Nobre da Costa (1978)
- Mota Pinto (1978–79)
- Pintasilgo (1979–80)
- Sá Carneiro (1980–81)
- Balsemão I (1981)
- Balsemão II (1981–83)
- Soares III (1983–85)
- Cavaco Silva I (1985–87)
- Cavaco Silva II (1987–91)
- Cavaco Silva III (1991–95)
- Guterres I (1995–99)
- Guterres II (1999–2002)
- Barroso (2002–04)
- Santana Lopes (2004–05)
- Sócrates I (2005–09)
- Sócrates II (2009–11)
- Passos Coelho I (2011–2015)
- Passos Coelho II (2015)
- Costa I (2015–2019)
- Costa II (2019–2022)
- Costa III (2022–2024)
- Montenegro (2024–present)