Government of Ahmad Qavam | |
|---|---|
cabinet of Iran | |
| Date formed | 27 January 1946 (1946-01-27) |
| Date dissolved | 31 July 1946 (1946-07-31) |
| People and organisations | |
| Head of state | Mohammad Reza Shah |
| Head of government | Ahmad Qavam |
| No. of ministers | 12 |
| Member parties | |
| History | |
| Successor | Qavam VII |
Ahmad Qavam became thePrime Minister of Iran on 27 January 1946, succeedingEbrahim Hakimi.[1] Qavam who won the competition for office overHossein Pirnia with 53 to 52 votes, was supported by theTudeh fraction while deputies associated with theNational Will Party voted against him, according toJamil Hasanli.[2]
He spent three weeks bargaining with theShah over the composition of his cabinet,[3] and presented his ministers to the parliament on 17 February,[2] before his scheduled trip toMoscow, asking for postponement of the debates forvote of confidence until his return.[3] He deliberately returned just before the end of the14th term, and expressed his regret for lack of time with "sardonic humor", in the last parliamentary session, when his ministers were approved.[3]
Qavam himself held ministries of Interior and Foreign Affairs; while according toErvand Abrahamian "gave five cabinet posts to his close supporters; yielded two others to court favorites; and handed the War Ministry to General Amir Ahmedi... whose ambitions and independent mind had often disturbed the young shah".[3]
Members of Qavam's cabinet were:
| Portfolio | Minister | Took office | Left office | Party | Ref | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prime Minister | 27 January 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Democrat Party | [2] | ||
| Foreign Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Democrat Party | [2] | ||
| Interior Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Democrat Party | [2] | ||
| Deputy Prime Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Democrat Party | [2] | ||
| Agriculture Minister | (head of ministry) | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Iran Party | [2] | |
| Culture Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Democrat Party | [2] | ||
| Finance Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Nonpartisan | [2] | ||
| Justice Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Nonpartisan | [2] | ||
| Post & Telegraph Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Nonpartisan | [2] | ||
| Public Health Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Democrat Party | [2] | ||
| Roads Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Military | [2] | ||
| Trade and Industry Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Nonpartisan | [2] | ||
| War Minister | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Military | [2] | ||
| Minister without portfolio | 10 March 1946 | 31 July 1946 | Nonpartisan | [2] | ||