Radičová's Cabinet

Radičová's Cabinet was the government of Slovakia between 8 July 2010 and 4 April 2012 headed by the prime minister Iveta Radičová, who was the first woman in this office. The government was formed as a coalition of four parties – Slovak Democratic and Christian Union – Democratic Party, Christian Democratic Movement, Freedom and Solidarity and Most–Híd.

Radičová's Cabinet

7th Cabinet of Slovakia
8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Date formed8 July 2010
Date dissolved4 April 2012
People and organisations
Head of stateIvan Gašparovič
Head of governmentIveta Radičová
No. of ministers15
Total no. of members15
Member partySDKÚ-DS
KDH
SaS
Most–Híd
Status in legislatureCoalition
Opposition partySmer-SD
SNS
History
Election(s)2010 Slovak parliamentary election
Incoming formation2010
Outgoing formation2012
PredecessorFico's First Cabinet
SuccessorFico's Second Cabinet

Government ministers

OfficeMinisterPolitical PartyIn office
Prime MinisterIveta RadičováSDKÚ-DS8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of Transport, Construction and Regional DevelopmentJán FigeľChristian Democratic Movement8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of Labour, Social Affairs and FamilyJozef MihálFreedom and Solidarity8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of FinanceIvan MiklošSDKÚ-DS8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of EconomyJuraj MiškovFreedom and Solidarity8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of Agriculture and Rural DevelopmentZsolt SimonMost–Híd8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of InteriorDaniel LipšicChristian Democratic Movement8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of DefenceĽubomír GalkoFreedom and Solidarity8 July 2010 – 23 November 2011
Iveta Radičová (Acting)SDKÚ-DS28 November 2011 – 4 April 2012
Minister of JusticeLucia ŽitňanskáSDKÚ-DS8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of Foreign AffairsMikuláš DzurindaSDKÚ-DS8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of Education, Science, Research and SportEugen JurzycaSDKÚ-DS8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of CultureDaniel KrajcerFreedom and Solidarity8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of HealthIvan UhliarikChristian Democratic Movement8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Minister of the EnvironmentJózsef NagyMost–Híd2 November 2010 – 4 April 2012

Deputy Prime Ministers

MinisterPolitical PartyIn officeNotes
Ján FigeľChristian Democratic Movement8 July 2010 – 4 April 20121st Deputy Prime Minister
Rudolf ChmelMost–Híd8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012Deputy Prime Minister of Human Rights and Minorities
Jozef MihálFreedom and Solidarity8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
Ivan MiklošSDKÚ-DS8 July 2010 – 4 April 2012
gollark: Come to think of it, we could probably put a lot of computing hardware into the solar power stuff, which presumably has a lot of power and some cooling.
gollark: The main constraints for high-performance computer stuff *now* are heat and power, or I guess sometimes networking between nodes.
gollark: Also, for random real-world background, there are only two companies making (high-performance, actually widely used) CPUs: Intel and AMD, and two making GPUs: AMD and Nvidia. Other stuff (flash storage, mainboards, RAM, whatever else) is made by many more manufacturers. Alienware and whatnot basically just buy parts from them, possibly design their own cases (and mainboards for laptops, to some extent), and add margin.
gollark: You could just have them require really powerful nonquantum computers.
gollark: Quantum computing accelerates specific workloads, not just *everything*.
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