Kabinett Costa III
Das Kabinett Costa III bildete vom 30. März 2022 bis zum 2. April 2024 die Regierung von Portugal.[1] Am 2. April 2024 wurde es vom Kabinett Montenegro abgelöst.
Mitglieder
Amt/ Ressort | Amtsinhaber[2] | Partei | |
---|---|---|---|
Premierminister | António Costa | PS | |
Präsidentschaftsangelegenheiten | Mariana Vieira da Silva | PS | |
Auswärtiges | João Gomes Cravinho | PS | |
Verteidigung | Helena Carreiras | Parteilos | |
Inneres | José Luís Carneiro | PS | |
Justiz | Catarina Sarmento e Castro | Parteilos | |
Finanzen | Fernando Medina | PS | |
Parlamentarische Angelegenheiten | Ana Catarina Mendes | PS | |
Wirtschaft und Meer | António Costa Silva | Parteilos | |
Kultur | Pedro Adão e Silva | Parteilos | |
Wissenschaft, Technologie und Hochschulbildung | Elvira Fortunato | Parteilos | |
Bildung | João Marques da Costa | PS | |
Arbeit, Solidarität und soziale Sicherheit | Ana Mendes Godinho | PS | |
Gesundheit | Marta Temido (bis August 2022) | PS | |
Manuel Pizarro Castro (ab September 2022) | PS | ||
Umwelt und Klimaschutz | Duarte Cordeiro | PS | |
Infrastruktur und Wohnen (bis 4. Januar 2023) | Pedro Nuno Santos (bis 4. Januar 2023) | PS | |
Infrastruktur (ab 4. Januar 2023) | João Galamba (4. Januar 2023 bis 13. November 2023)[3] | PS | |
António Costa (ab 13. November 2023) | PS | ||
Wohnen (ab 4. Januar 2023) | Marina Gonçalves (ab 4. Januar 2023) | PS | |
Territorialer Zusammenhalt | Ana Abrunhosa | Parteilos | |
Landwirtschaft und Ernährung | Maria do Céu Antunes | PS |
Einzelnachweise
- ↑ Portugal: Regierung hat erstmals mehr Frauen als Männer. In: Der Spiegel. 23. März 2022, ISSN 2195-1349 (spiegel.de [abgerufen am 30. März 2022]).
- ↑ Presidência da República Portuguesa: Presidente da República aceita composição do XXIII Governo Constitucional. Abgerufen am 30. März 2022 (portugiesisch).
- ↑ Celia Paulo, Maria João Pereira: Ermittlungen gegen Portugals Regierung: Infrastrukturminister tritt zurück. 14. November 2023, abgerufen am 27. Dezember 2023 (deutsch).
Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien
Wappen Portugals
Autor/Urheber: Assim é Portugal, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Portuguese politician Mariana Vieira da Silva in 2018
Autor/Urheber: Ministério da Indústria, Comércio Exterior e Serviços from Brasília, Brasil, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 2.0
Audiência com o Embaixador João Gomes Cravinho - Chefe da Delegação da União Europeia no Brasil e Nicola Ardito - Primeiro-Conselheiro para os Assuntos de Comércio da Delegação da União Europeia no Brasil
Foto: Washington Costa/MDICAutor/Urheber: Agência Lusa, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Manuel Pizarro, Portuguese Minister of Health, in a press conference.
Autor/Urheber: tvbarroso reportagens, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Catarina Mendes, Portuguese politician, in 2015.
Autor/Urheber: Web Summit, Lizenz: CC BY 2.0
3 November 2021; Marta Temido, Minister for Health, Government of Portugal on the HealthConf Stage during day two of Web Summit 2021 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon, Portugal. Photo by Diarmuid Greene/Web Summit via Sportsfile
Autor/Urheber: Óbidos TV, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Ana Abrunhosa, Portuguese Minister of Territorial Cohesion, in a ceremony during the Óbidos Municipal Holiday (11 January), in 2020.
Autor/Urheber: RickMorais, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 4.0
Fernando Medina, Mayor of Lisbon, during the procession of Our Lady of Good Health. Lisbon, 8 May 2016.
Autor/Urheber: Agência Lusa, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
António Costa Silva, Portuguese Minister for the Economy and the Sea.
Autor/Urheber: Agência Lusa, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Helena Carreiras, Portuguese Minister of Defence in 2022
Autor/Urheber: Agência Lusa, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
João Galamba, Portuguese Minister of Infrastructure, during a press conference in April 2023.
Autor/Urheber: Web Summit, Lizenz: CC BY 2.0
6 November 2019; António Costa, Prime Minister, Portugal, at Google partner stall during day two of Web Summit 2019 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon, Portugal. Photo by Stephen McCarthy/Web Summit via Sportsfile
Autor/Urheber: Arquidiocese de Braga, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Ana Mendes Godinho, Ministra do Trabalho, da Solidariedade e da Segurança Social, na mesa-redonda "Precariado: Novas Explorações Laborais" promovida pela Arquidiocese de Braga em 2021.
Autor/Urheber: Somos Bibliotecas, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Pedro Adão e Silva, Portuguese sociologist and politician
Autor/Urheber: CP - Comboios de Portugal, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Portuguese Minister of Infrastructure and Housing Pedro Nuno Santos makes a speech during the reopening of C.P. Maintenance Workshop in Guifões, on 15 January 2020.
Autor/Urheber: Agência Lusa, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Catarina Sarmento e Castro, Portuguese Minister of Justice, during a press conference in 2022.
Autor/Urheber: Ministère de l'Europe et des Affaires étrangères, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Elvira Fortunato, Portuguese scientist
Autor/Urheber: Agência Lusa, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Duarte Cordeiro, Minister of Environment and Climate Action in the 23rd Constitutional Government of Portugal, 2022.
Autor/Urheber: Web Summit, Lizenz: CC BY 2.0
2 November 2022; Speakers, from left, Felix Ohswald, Co-founder & CEO, GoStudent; João Costa, Minister of Education, Government of Portugal; and Marjorie Paillon, Presenter, France 24 on Startup University Stage during day one of Web Summit 2022 at the Altice Arena in Lisbon, Portugal. Photo by Lukas Schulze/Web Summit via Sportsfile
Autor/Urheber: Governo do Rio Grande do Sul, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
O Secretário de Estado das Comunidades Portuguesas, José Luís Carneiro, no Palácio Piratini, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil, em 2017.
Autor/Urheber: Agência Lusa, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
Maria do Céu Antunes, Portuguese Minister of Agriculture, in Brussels, 2023.
Autor/Urheber: Governo de Portugal, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 4.0
Retrato oficial da Secretária de Estado da Habitação Marina Gonçalves