Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Politics of Slovenia" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Janez and Drnovšek
Janez Drnovšek ( pronounced ; 17 May 1950 – 23 February 2008 ) was a Slovenian liberal politician, President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia ( 1989 – 1990 ), Prime Minister of Slovenia ( 1992 – 2002 ) and President of Slovenia ( 2002 – 2007 ).
Between 2002 and 2004, the relationship between President Drnovšek and Janez Janša, then leader of the opposition, were considered more than good and in the first year of cohabitation, no major problems arose.
In the last months in office, Drnovšek continued his attacks on Prime Minister Janez Janša, who mostly remained silent on the issue.
He came into conflict with President Janez Drnovšek, though they are from the same party.
The first Prime Minister of Slovenia from LDS was Janez Drnovšek, who later became the President of Slovenia in 2002 and was succeeded by Anton Rop, former Finance Minister.
* Janez Drnovšek ( 1992 − 2002 )
The remaining People's Party performed poorly in the election in October 2000, but became part of the Liberal-led coalition government of Janez Drnovšek.
He was succeeded as President by Janez Drnovšek.
Slovenia was represented by the President of the Republic Milan Kučan, Prime Minister Lojze Peterle, Minister of Foreign Affairs Dimitrij Rupel, the Slovenian representative in the Yugoslav presidency Janez Drnovšek, and President of Slovenian National Assembly France Bučar.
After the fall of Peterle's cabinet in 1992, the party entered the first coalition government of Janez Drnovšek, formed by the left wing of the dissolved DEMOS coalition ( the Social Democratic Party of Slovenia, the Democratic Party of Slovenia and the Greens of Slovenia ).
These three largest parties decided to form a government coalition, which soon became popularly known as the " grand coalition " (), under the leadership of Liberal Democrat Prime Minister Janez Drnovšek.
In the election of 2000, the party rose to 12 % of the vote and entered the centre-left coalition government led by Janez Drnovšek, while the party's president Borut Pahor was elected chairman of the Slovenian National Assembly.
In the elections of 2000, he was elected to the National Assembly, but Janez Drnovšek returned to power as prime minister.
Rupel also remained in office during the first centre-left coalition government led by Janez Drnovšek.
In 1994, most of Rupel's party merged into the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia party, led by Janez Drnovšek.
Rupel returned to the post of the foreign minister of Slovenia in 2000 in the third cabinet of Janez Drnovšek.
* 1994: The party merged with theDemocratic Party, a faction of the Slovenian Greens and the Socialist Party of Slovenia into the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia ( Liberalna demokracija Slovenije ), led by Janez Drnovšek
After the breakup of the SDZ in 1992, he joined the Social Democratic Party of Slovenia ( now called Slovenian Democratic Party ) and remained Defence Minister in the center-left coalition government of Janez Drnovšek until March 1994.
In March 1994, Janša was dismissed by Prime Minister Janez Drnovšek as a consequence of the Smolnikar affair ( also known as Depala Vas affair ).
Between 2002 and 2004, he established cordial relations with the President of the Republic Janez Drnovšek: in 2003, Drnovšek headed a round table on Slovenia's future based on Janša's recommendations.
He served as prime minister until May 1992, when due to an internal crisis in the DEMOS coalition, a new coalition government under Janez Drnovšek was established by a constructive vote of no confidence.
The Christian Democrats entered a cross-party coalition with the Liberal Democrats and the United List of Social Democrats ( former Communist Party of Slovenia ) under the leadership of Janez Drnovšek.
In 2000, Pahor led his party in the coalition with the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia led by Janez Drnovšek.

Janez and Liberal
After the internal crisis in the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia ( LDS ) following the loss of election in 2004, which resulted in the split of the party, the Social Democrats emerged as the main centre-left opposition force against the centre-right government led by Janez Janša.
In the first years of Janez Janša's centre right government, Pahor openly polemized with Anton Rop, the leader of the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia, over the opposition strategy towards the government.

Janez and Democratic
Upon his election, Šrot announced he wanted to transform the SLS in the largest center-right party in Slovenia, thus challenging the primacy of Janez Janša's Slovenian Democratic Party.
Bajuk ’ s party stayed in the opposition and formed a shadow cabinet jointly with Janez Janša's Social Democratic Party of Slovenia.

Janez and Party
He nevertheless managed to remain the chairman of the Party until 2000, when the Christian Democrats merged with the Slovenian People's Party, which had until then supported Janez Drnovšek's third term as Prime Minister.

Janez and Slovenia
* Janez Potočnik ( LDS, Slovenia ): European Commissioner for the Environment
In 1689, Janez Vajkard Valvasor, a pioneer of study of karst in Slovenia and a fellow of the The Royal Society for Improving Natural Knowledge, London, introduced the word karst to European scholars, describing the phenomenon of underground flows of rivers.
In 2007 three Slovenian artists legally changed their names to Janez Janša, the Slovenia ’ s economic-liberal, conservative prime minister at the time.
Yleisradio's investigative program MOT published details of the case, causing a scandal in Slovenia, since the Slovenian Government including then-Prime Minister Janez Janša was allegedly involved.
From 2004 to 2008, New Slovenia was part of the centre-right " Coalition Slovenia " led by Prime Minister Janez Janša.
He served briefly as Prime Minister of Slovenia in the year 2000, and Finance Minister in the centre-right government of Janez Janša between 2004 and 2008.
Ivan Janša ( born 17 September 1958 ), baptized and best known as Janez Janša, is a Slovenian politician who has been Prime Minister of Slovenia since February 2012.
Janez graduated from the University of Ljubljana with a degree in Defence Studies in 1982, and became a trainee in the Defence Secretariate of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia.

Janez and was
In 2007, an artistic performance was held atop Mount Triglav by the artists Janez Janša ( director ), Janez Janša ( visual artist ) and Janez Janša ( performance artist ) as Mount Triglav on Mount Triglav.
It was published on 26 April 1848 in the newspaper Kmetijske in rokodelske novice, edited by the conservative Slovene leader Janez Bleiweis.
This proposal was also supported by Janez Janša.
Young Janez was raised in the small town of Kisovec in the municipality of Zagorje ob Savi, where his father Viktor was the local mine chief and his mother Silva was a homemaker.
Janez Avguštin Puhar ( August 26, 1814-August 7, 1864 ) was a Slovene priest, photographer, painter, and poet.
It was translated in 1812 by Janez Nepomuk Primic ( 1785 – 1823 ).
His government lost the October 2004 elections, and he relinquished the post of Prime Minister on November 9, 2004 when Janez Janša was elected.
Allegations in Finnish media that bribery was used by Patria to secure the Slovenian contract led to a scandal and a criminal investigation in Finland and may have contributed to the defeat of Prime Minister Janez Janša in the 2008 Slovenian parliamentary elections.
According to the 18th century historian Janez Gregor Dolničar, the original predecessor of Emona was founded cca 1222 BC.
The climax of Intimism was achieved in 1953 with a collection of poetry titled Poems of the Four (), written by Janez Menart, Ciril Zlobec, Kajetan Kovič and Tone Pavček.
The new party was named United List of Social Democrats and Janez Kocijančič was elected as its president.

0.141 seconds.