Støre Cabinet

Cabinet of Norway
Incumbent
Date formed14 October 2021
People and organisations
Head of stateHarald V of Norway
Head of governmentJonas Gahr Støre
No. of ministers20
Member partyLabour Party
Centre Party
Status in legislatureCentre to centre-left
coalition minority government
Opposition partyConservative Party
Christian Democratic Party
Green Party
Liberal Party
Progress Party
Red Party
Socialist Left Party
Opposition leaderErna Solberg
History
Election(s)2021
Legislature term(s)2021–2025
Budget(s)2022 (revised), 2023, 2024
Incoming formation2021 election
PredecessorSolberg's Cabinet

The Støre Cabinet is the incumbent government of the Kingdom of Norway, headed by Labour Party leader Jonas Gahr Støre as Prime Minister. The government was appointed by King Harald V on 14 October 2021, following the parliamentary election on 13 September, consisting of the Labour Party (Ap) and the Centre Party (Sp) as a minority government.[1][2]

Members

On 14 October 2021, Jonas Gahr Støre's cabinet ministers were appointed by King Harald V. The cabinet consists of 19 ministers;[3] one fewer than the previous Solberg cabinet. It has eleven ministers from Labour and eight from Centre, reflecting the parties' numerical strength in Parliament.[4]

The cabinet consists of ten women and nine men, two of whom (Brenna and Vestre) survived the 2011 Norway attacks.[5][6] At age 28, Emilie Enger Mehl became the youngest person to serve as the minister of justice in the Norwegian government. This is also the third time in Norwegian history that a cabinet has a women-majority.[7][8]

A cabinet reshuffle was held on 16 October 2023. The Minister of Digitalisation position was re-established, thereby increasing the number of ministers to 20.[9]

PortfolioMinisterTookofficeLeftofficeParty
Prime Minister14 October 2021Incumbent Labour
Minister of Finance14 October 2021Incumbent Centre
Minister of Labour and Social Inclusion14 October 20214 March 2022 Labour
7 March 202216 October 2023 Labour
16 October 2023Incumbent Labour
Minister of Research and Higher Education14 October 20214 August 2023 Centre
4 August 2023Incumbent Centre
Minister of Fisheries and Ocean Policy14 October 202116 October 2023 Labour
16 October 2023Incumbent Labour
Minister of International Development14 October 2021Incumbent Centre
Minister of Foreign Affairs14 October 202116 October 2023 Labour
16 October 2023Incumbent Labour
Minister of Defence14 October 202112 April 2022 Centre
12 April 2022Incumbent Centre
Minister of Climate and the Environment14 October 202116 October 2023 Labour
16 October 2023Incumbent Labour
Minister of Children and Families14 October 2021Incumbent Centre
Minister of Local Government and Regional Development14 October 202112 April 2022 Centre
12 April 202216 October 2023 Centre
16 October 2023Incumbent Centre
Minister of Transport14 October 2021Incumbent Labour
Minister of Energy[lower-alpha 1]14 October 20217 March 2022 Labour
7 March 2022Incumbent Labour
Minister of Health and Care Services14 October 2021Incumbent Labour
Minister of Culture and Equality14 October 202128 June 2023 Labour
28 June 2023Incumbent Labour
Minister of Trade and Industry14 October 2021Incumbent Labour
Minister of Education14 October 202116 October 2023 Labour
16 October 2023Incumbent Labour
Minister of Agriculture and Food14 October 20214 August 2023 Centre
4 August 2023Incumbent Centre
Minister of Justice and Public Security14 October 2021Incumbent Centre
Minister of Digitalisation and Public Governance16 October 2023Incumbent Labour

    Notes

    1. Minister of Petroleum and Energy until 1 January 2024.[10]

    References

    1. "Norway's Labor, Center parties agree to form pro-oil minority coalition". Bloomberg News. 10 October 2021.
    2. "Norway's Labor, center agree to form pro-oil minority coalition". World Oil News. 10 October 2021.
    3. Government of Norway (14 October 2021). "Members of the Government". government.no. Norwegian Government Security and Service Organisation. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
    4. Norwegian Government (14 October 2021)Fields of responsibility in Jonas Gahr Støre’s government government.no. Retrieved 17 October 2021 (in Norwegian)
    5. Ekroll, Henning Carr; Bergvall, Anne Sofie Lid (14 October 2021). "Rørt Støre fikk nøkkelkortet til Statsministerens kontor" [Støre touched when receiving access to keycard to the prime minister's office]. Aftenposten (in Norwegian Bokmål). Archived from the original on 14 October 2021.
    6. Norwell, Frazer (14 October 2021). "Norway's new cabinet includes majority women and Utøya survivors". The Local. Archived from the original on 14 October 2021.
    7. Dakkam (14 October 2021)new cabinet includes majority women and Utøya survivors worldakkam.com. Retrieved 16 October 2021 (in English)
    8. Røsvik, Eirik; Haakonsen, Andreas; Fjellanger, Runa (14 October 2021). "Mehl (28) blir tidenes yngste justisminister: Hylles av politiske motstandere" [Mehl (28) becomes the youngest minister of justice of all time: Praised by political adversaries]. Verdens Gang (in Norwegian Bokmål). Archived from the original on 14 October 2021.
    9. "Her er Støre sine nye statsrådar" (in Norwegian Nynorsk). NRK. 16 October 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
    10. "Oppretter nytt departement" (in Norwegian). government.no. 16 October 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
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