1979 in Luxembourg

Incumbents

Position Incumbent
Grand Duke Jean
Prime Minister

Gaston Thorn (until 16 July)
Pierre Werner (from 16 July)
Deputy Prime Minister

Bernard Berg (until 16 July)
Gaston Thorn (from 16 July)
President of the Chamber of Deputies

René Van Den Bulcke
Léon Bollendorff
President of the Council of State Roger Maul (until 16 September)
Alex Bonn (from 21 September)
Mayor of Luxembourg City Colette Flesch

Events

January – March

April – June

  • 9 May - Monsanto Company closes its production facility at Echternach after 13 years of operation, with the loss of 750 jobs.[2]
  • 9 June – Native Luxembourger Lucien Didier wins the 1979 Tour de Luxembourg.
  • 10 June – Legislative and European elections are held. In the Chamber of Deputies, the CSV win another six seats, with all three left wing parties losing three deputies each.[3]

July – September

  • 16 July – After the elections of 10 June, Pierre Werner forms a new government as Prime Minister, with his predecessor Gaston Thorn as his Deputy Prime Minister.[3]

October – December

  • 3 December – Ministers from France, Germany, and Luxembourg meet in Bonn. Germany and Luxembourg protest against France's plans to allow the construction of a nuclear power plant at Cattenom, but in vain.[4]

Births

  • 2 July – Claudine Muno, journalist and musician
  • 27 September – Jérôme Jaminet, linguist and writer
  • 11 December - Jean Muller, pianist

Deaths

Footnotes

  1. Thewes (2006), p. 186
  2. "Monsanto". industrie.lu. 20 July 2004. Retrieved 2008-03-26.
  3. Thewes (2006), p. 192
  4. Thewes (2006), p. 197
gollark: "No more security problems", he says, ignoring the fact that I `wget -r`ed the folder before it went down.
gollark: Bloat, yes.
gollark: Oops.
gollark: This is... quite some sequrity problem.
gollark: Mediawiki bad dokuwiki good.

References

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