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Montevideo, March 28th 2024 - 09:04 UTC

 

 

New Spanish government takes oath of office next Monday: outstanding names in the cabinet

Saturday, January 11th 2020 - 09:45 UTC
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The list of ministers is to be presented by Pedro Sanchez to King Felipe VI on Sunday and the government to take the oath of office the following day. The list of ministers is to be presented by Pedro Sanchez to King Felipe VI on Sunday and the government to take the oath of office the following day.
The foreign affairs portfolio goes to Arancha Gonzalez, head of the International Trade Centre, indicating, “economic diplomacy will be the priority” The foreign affairs portfolio goes to Arancha Gonzalez, head of the International Trade Centre, indicating, “economic diplomacy will be the priority”
Sanchez's current deputy Carmen Calvo, will handle ties with the fragmented parliament, where government holds a minority of 155 in the 350-seat chamber. Sanchez's current deputy Carmen Calvo, will handle ties with the fragmented parliament, where government holds a minority of 155 in the 350-seat chamber.

Women experts and radical leftists looked set to play a dominant role in Spain's new coalition government as Pedro Sanchez on Friday named a senior global trade expert as his top diplomat.

Following nearly a year of political deadlock, Sanchez was confirmed as prime minister on Tuesday, freeing him up to piece together his new government, a minority coalition comprising his Socialists and the radical left-wing Podemos.

Nearly all of the ministers in the new lineup have been named, with the list to be presented to King Felipe VI on Sunday and the government to take the oath of office the following day.

And like Sanchez's first government, named in June 2018 after he toppled former conservative premier Mariano Rajoy in a no-confidence vote, it will feature many women holding top ministerial posts.

In Friday's surprise announcement, Sanchez's office said the foreign affairs portfolio would be held by Arancha Gonzalez, head of the International Trade Centre, in a clear indication that for the new government, “economic diplomacy will be the priority”.

A polyglot who also speaks English, French, German, Italian and Basque, Gonzalez spent eight years as chief-of-staff at the World Trade Organization (WTO) before moving in 2013 to the ITC, a UN and WTO agency.

Known internationally, the 50-year-old will take up her post on Monday alongside 22 other ministers, five of them from the far left, in a cabinet in which Sanchez has four deputies.

One is Podemos' pony-tailed leader Pablo Iglesias, 41, who will handle the social rights portfolio, while the other three are women ministers from the previous government.

Sanchez's current deputy, Carmen Calvo, 62, will continue in the role and handle ties with the deeply-fragmented parliament, where the government only holds a minority of 155 within the 350-seat chamber.

For the other two - Economy Minister Nadia Calviño and Environment Minister Teresa Ribera - the post is a promotion. Ribera, 50, is a recognized climate expert who headed the Paris-based Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations.

Calviño, 51, is a former top EU official who joined Sanchez's first government in an apparent bid to reassure Brussels the Socialist administration would respect Euro-zone budget rules.

The new coalition has pledged to raise the minimum wage and hike taxes on high earners and large businesses, while also repealing elements of the controversial 2012 labor market reforms.

Categories: Politics, International.

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