Hagerup's Second Cabinet

The Hagerup's Second Cabinet governed Norway between 22 October 1903 and 11 March 1905. It fell as the cabinet ministers collectively resigned on 28 February and 1 March 1905, as part of the build-up for the dissolution of the union between Norway and Sweden in 1905. Christian Michelsen withdrew his application, and could form the cabinet Michelsen. It had the following composition:

Hagerup's Second Cabinet

Cabinet of Norway
Prime Minister Francis Hagerup.
Date formed22 October 1903
Date dissolved11 March 1905
People and organisations
Head of stateOscar II of Sweden
Head of governmentFrancis Hagerup
No. of ministers11
Member partyConservative Party
Coalition Party
Liberal Party
Status in legislatureMajority
History
PredecessorBlehr's First Cabinet
SuccessorMichelsen's Cabinet

Cabinet members

[1]

PortfolioMinisterTookofficeLeftofficeParty
Prime Minister
Minister of Justice
 Francis Hagerup22 October 190311 March 1905Conservative
Prime Minister in Stockholm Sigurd Ibsen22 October 190311 March 1905Liberal
Minister of Finance and Customs Birger Kildal22 October 19031 September 1904Liberal
 Christian Michelsen1 September 190411 March 1905Coalition
Minister of Auditing Birger Kildal22 October 19031 September 1904Liberal
 Paul Benjamin Vogt1 September 190411 March 1905Liberal
Minister of Defence Oscar Strugstad22 October 190311 March 1905Coalition
Minister of Agriculture Christian P. Mathiesen22 October 190326 September 1904Conservative
 Johan E. Mellbye26 September 190411 March 1905Conservative
Minister of Education and Church Affairs Hans Nilsen Hauge22 October 190311 March 1905Conservative
Minister of Trade Jacob Schøning22 October 19031 September 1904Liberal
 Paul Benjamin Vogt1 September 190411 March 1905Conservative
Minister of Labour Albert Hansen22 October 190311 March 1905Conservative
Members of the Council of State Division in Stockholm Christian Michelsen22 October 19031 September 1904Coalition
 Paul Benjamin Vogt22 October 19031 September 1904Conservative
 Birger Kildal1 September 190411 March 1905Liberal
 Jacob Schøning1 September 190411 March 1905Liberal

State Secretary

Not to be confused with the modern title State Secretary. The old title State Secretary, used between 1814 and 1925, is now known as Secretary to the Government (Regjeringsråd).[2]

gollark: As I said, some media is taxpayer-funded, but then it might get biased by the government itself.
gollark: In the UK we have the BBC, which is taxpayer-funded in some strange way, and tends to be pretty okay.
gollark: ... maybe, then? I mean, lots of media is somewhat biased, but generally doesn't tell *outright lies*.
gollark: Er, that's a statement.
gollark: Are you going to ask it?

References

Notes

  1. Unless otherwise noted, the period was 22 October 1903 - 11 March 1905
  2. Secretary to the Council of State since 1814 - Government.no


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