Federal Government of Belgium

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Belgium
Constitution
Foreign relations

The Federal Government of Belgium (Dutch: Federale regering, French: Gouvernement fédéral, German: Föderalregierung) exercises executive power in the Kingdom of Belgium. It consists of ministers and secretaries of state ("junior", or deputy-ministers who do not sit in the Council of Ministers) drawn from the political parties which form the governing coalition. Formally, the ministers are appointed by the King. The federal government is led by the Prime Minister of Belgium, and Ministers lead ministries of the government. Ministers together form the Council of Ministers, which is the supreme executive organ of the Government (equivalent to a cabinet).

Function and composition

At the federal level, executive power is wielded by the Federal Government, whilst the Prime Minister is the head of the government. Each minister heads a ministry, and secretaries of state, who are deputy to a minister, help run these ministries. The government reflects the weight of political parties that constitute the current governing coalition for the Chamber. No single party or party family across linguistic lines holds an absolute majority of seats in Parliament.

The number of ministers is limited to 15, equally divided between French-speaking and Dutch-speaking ministers, according to Article 99 of the Constitution. Although the Prime Minister is officially exempt from this quota, no francophones held the post from 1979 to 2011. Government meetings are conducted through simultaneous interpreters.

The Prime Minister and his ministers administer the government and the various Federal Public Services (roughly equivalent to ministries in other countries’ administrative organization). As in the United Kingdom, ministers must defend their policies and performance in person before the Chamber.

An important de facto body is the "inner cabinet" (kernkabinet; conseil des ministres restreint or kern), consisting of the Prime Minister and the Deputy Prime Ministers. They meet to make the most important political decisions.

Formation

After the elections, the Prime Minister of the former government (which still serves as a temporary government until the new government is formed) offers his resignation to the King, and the formation process for a new government starts.[1] This process is based largely on constitutional convention rather than written law. The King is first consulted by the President of the Chamber of Representatives and the President of the Senate. The King also meets a number of prominent politicians in order to discuss the election results. Following these meetings, an Informateur is appointed.

The Informateur has the task of exploring the various possibilities for the new Federal Government and assessing which parties can form a majority in the Federal Parliament.[1] He also meets with prominent people in the socio-economic field to learn their views on the policy that the new Federal Government should conduct. The Informateur then reports to the King and advises him about the appointment of the Formateur.[1] However the King can also appoint a second Informateur or appoint a royal mediator. The task of a royal mediator is to reach an agreement on contentious issues, resolve remaining obstacles to the formation of a Federal Government and prepare the ground for a Formateur. On July 5, 2007 King Albert II appointed Jean-Luc Dehaene as royal mediator to reach an agreement on a new State Reform.[2]

The Formateur is appointed by the King on the basis of the informateur's report. The task of the Formateur is to form a new government coalition and lead the negotiations about the government agreement and the composition of the government. If these negotiations succeed, the Formateur presents a new Federal Government to the King. Usually, the Formateur also becomes the Prime Minister.[1]

In accordance with article 96 of the Belgian Constitution, the King appoints and dismisses his ministers. However article 88 of the Belgian Constitution states that the King cannot act alone and all of his acts must be countersigned by a minister. In practice the outgoing Prime Minister countersigns the Royal Order appointing the new Prime Minister. Subsequently, the new Prime Minister countersigns the Royal Order accepting the resignation of the outgoing Prime Minister and the Royal Orders appointing the other members of the new Federal Government.

The appointed ministers take the oath of office before the King. After they have taken the oath, the new Council of Ministers meets to draw up the declaration of government, in which the Federal Government sets out the main lines of the government agreement and outlines the government agenda. The Prime Minister reads the declaration of government to the Chamber of Representatives, which then holds a debate on the declaration of government. Following this debate, a vote of Confidence takes place. If the Prime Minister obtains the confidence of the majority, he can begin implementing the government agreement.

Recent political developments

Catholics and later Christian democrats have led most of the governments in Belgian history. However, from 1999 until 2007, liberal Guy Verhofstadt led two "purple" governments of liberals and socialists, the first of which also included greens. Afterwards, after difficult negotiations and an interim third Verhofstadt government, a government was eventually formed in 2008 led by Christian democrat Yves Leterme. New elections were called in 2010 after liberal Open Vld quit the government. After a record-breaking government formation, the Di Rupo Government was formed; Elio Di Rupo was the first francophone to hold the post of Prime Minister since Paul Vanden Boeynants left office in 1979. The formation of the Di Rupo Government ended the period of political instability between 2007 and 2011. During the 2014 elections, there was political consensus to not repeat this, and the Michel Government was relatively quickly formed, notably excluding socialists and including the Flemish nationalist N-VA.

Incumbent government

The current Michel Government, sworn in on 11 October 2014, consists of 14 ministers and 4 state secretaries formed by a coalition of the Dutch-speaking parties N-VA, Open VLD and CD&V and the French-speaking party MR.

MinisterNameParty
Prime MinisterCharles MichelMR
Deputy Prime Minister – Minister of the Interior, Safety and Director of buildingsJan JambonN-VA
Deputy Prime Minister – Minister of Foreign AffairsDidier ReyndersMR
Deputy Prime Minister – Minister of Employment, Economy, Consumer AffairsKris PeetersCD&V
Deputy Prime Minister – Development Cooperation, Digital Agenda, Telecom and Postal ServicesAlexander De CrooOpen Vld
Minister of the Middle Class, SMEs, Self-employed and AgricultureDenis DucarmeMR
Minister of BudgetSophie WilmèsMR
Minister of EnergyMarie-Christine MarghemMR
Minister of MobilityFrançois BellotMR
Minister of PensionsDaniel BacquelaineMR
Minister of DefenceSteven VandeputN-VA
Minister of Finance and fighting Fiscal FraudJohan Van OvertveldtN-VA
Minister of JusticeKoen GeensCD&V
Minister of Social Affairs and HealthMaggie De BlockOpen Vld
Secretary of StateNameParty
Secretary of State for Asylum, Migration and Administrative SimplificationTheo FranckenN-VA
Secretary of State for Equal Rights, Disabled Persons, Scientific Policy, Urban Policy and fighting PovertyZuhal DemirN-VA
Secretary of State for Foreign TradePieter De CremCD&V
Secretary of State for Social fraud, Privacy and the North SeaPhilippe De BackerOpen Vld

See also

Further reading

  • Diermeier, Daniel; Eraslan, Hülya; Merlo, Antonio (August 2007). "Bicameralism and government formation". Quarterly Journal of Political Science. Now Publishing Inc. 2 (3): 227–252. doi:10.1561/100.00005004.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 (in Dutch) De vorming van een regering, belgium.be
  2. "Jean-Luc Dehaene stapt in de ring als bemiddelaar" (in Dutch). De Standaard. 2007-07-05. Retrieved 2010-06-18.
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