Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q390947> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 45 of
45
with 100 triples per page.
- Q390947 subject Q6358534.
- Q390947 subject Q8296194.
- Q390947 abstract "The Federal Government of Belgium (Dutch: Federale regering, French: Gouvernement fédéral, German: Föderalregierung) exercises executive power in the Kingdom of Belgium. It consists of ministers and secretaries of state ("junior", or deputy-ministers who do not sit in the Council of Ministers) drawn from the political parties which form the governing coalition. Formally, the ministers are appointed by the King. The federal government is led by the Prime Minister of Belgium, and Ministers lead ministries of the government. Some federal ministers do not have seats in the Parliament. Ministers together form the Council of Ministers, which is the supreme executive organ of the Government (equivalent to a cabinet).The number of ministers is limited to 15, equally divided between French-speaking and Dutch-speaking ministers, according to Article 99 of the Constitution. Although the Prime Minister is officially exempt from this quota, no francophones held the post from 1979 to 2011. Government meetings are conducted through simultaneous interpreters.The Prime Minister and his ministers administer the government and the various Federal Public Services (roughly equivalent to ministries in other countries’ administrative organization). As in the United Kingdom, ministers must defend their policies and performance in person before the Chamber.At the federal level, executive power is wielded by the government, whilst the Prime Minister is the head of the government. Each minister heads a ministry, and secretaries of state help run these ministries. The government reflects the weight of political parties that constitute the current governing coalition for the Chamber. No single party or party family across linguistic lines holds an absolute majority of seats in Parliament.The former Leterme II government succeeded the Van Rompuy I Government on 24 November 2009, after Herman Van Rompuy became the first President of the European Council. On 22 April 2010 Prime Minister Yves Leterme again offered the resignation of his government to the king. Due to the inability of the political parties to agree on the formation of a new government, the Leterme Government remained in office in a caretaker role for 589 days—the longest known duration of a caretaker government in the developed world—until 6 December 2011, when Elio Di Rupo formed the Di Rupo I Government. Di Rupo is the first francophone to hold this post since Paul Vanden Boeynants left office in 1979.".
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1137059.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1160192.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q12981.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q12983.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1347545.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1355042.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1427911.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q145.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q15048.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q15056.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1550761.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q1626321.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q18196354.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q192350.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q19601543.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q213107.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q2285706.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q250021.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q2720142.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q2864346.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q28982.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q31.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q3112663.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q329547.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q3525220.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q35798.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q3911.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q533384.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q585744.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q633629.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q6358534.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q640506.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q7278.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q735587.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q736559.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q750673.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q8296194.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q83307.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q837416.
- Q390947 wikiPageWikiLink Q916072.
- Q390947 comment "The Federal Government of Belgium (Dutch: Federale regering, French: Gouvernement fédéral, German: Föderalregierung) exercises executive power in the Kingdom of Belgium. It consists of ministers and secretaries of state ("junior", or deputy-ministers who do not sit in the Council of Ministers) drawn from the political parties which form the governing coalition. Formally, the ministers are appointed by the King.".
- Q390947 label "Federal Government of Belgium".