Zijlstra cabinet | |
|---|---|
Cabinet of the Netherlands | |
The first meeting of the incoming Zijlstra cabinet on 21 November 1966 | |
| Date formed | 22 November 1966 (1966-11-22) |
| Date dissolved | 5 April 1967 (1967-04-05) 134 days in office (Demissionary from 15 February 1967 (1967-02-15)) |
| People and organisations | |
| Monarch | Queen Juliana |
| Prime Minister | Jelle Zijlstra |
| Deputy Prime Minister | Jan de Quay Barend Biesheuvel |
| No. of ministers | 13 |
| Member party | Catholic People's Party (KVP) Anti-Revolutionary Party (ARP) |
| Status in legislature | Centrist Minority government (Caretaker/Rump) |
| History | |
| Outgoing election | 1967 election |
| Legislature terms | 1963–1967 |
| Incoming formation | 1966 formation |
| Outgoing formation | 1967 formation |
| Predecessor | Cals cabinet |
| Successor | De Jong cabinet |
| This article is part ofa series on |
| Politics of the Netherlands |
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TheZijlstra cabinet was theexecutive branch of theDutch Government from 22 November 1966 until 5 April 1967. The cabinet was formed by thechristian-democraticCatholic People's Party (KVP) and theAnti-Revolutionary Party (ARP) after the fall of the previousCabinet Cals. Thecaretakerrump cabinet was acentrist coalition and had aminority in theHouse of Representatives with formerProtestant LeaderJelle Zijlstra a former Minister of Finance serving asPrime Minister and dual served asMinister of Finance. FormerCatholic Prime MinisterJan de Quay served asDeputy Prime Minister andMinister of Transport and Water Management,Protestant LeaderBarend Biesheuvel continued as Deputy Prime Minister,Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries and the responsibility forSuriname and Netherlands Antilles Affairs from previouscabinet.
The cabinet served in the middle of the tumultuous 1960s, domestically it had to deal with thecounterculture and its primary objective was to make preparations for asnap election in1967. Following theelection the cabinet continued in ademissionary capacity until it was replaced by theDe Jong cabinet.[1][2][3]
Following the fall of theCals cabinet theLabour Party (PvdA) left the coalition and theCatholic People's Party and theAnti-Revolutionary Party formed aRump cabinet.
Such a transitional cabinet is not supposed to take important decisions, but it still resolved the issue over the introduction ofcommercial television, which had been a major issue in the two previous cabinets, with theomroepwet, which allowed commercial blocks on public television (between shows), despite protests byVVD and part ofCHU.
