Carlsson I Cabinet
cabinet of Sweden (1986–1990)
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Carlsson I Cabinet
Summary
Carlsson I Cabinet is a Government of Sweden[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Carlsson I Cabinet is in the country of Sweden[3].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's head of government is recorded as Ingvar Carlsson[4].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's head of government is recorded as Ingvar Carlsson[5].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's instance of is recorded as Government of Sweden[6].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's follows is recorded as Palme II Cabinet[7].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's followed by is recorded as Carlsson II Cabinet[8].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Ingvar Carlsson[9].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Sten Wickbom[10].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Anna-Greta Leijon[11].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Thage G. Peterson[12].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Ingvar Carlsson[13].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Laila Freivalds[14].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Sten Andersson[15].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Lena Hjelm-Wallén[16].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Mats Hellström[17].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Anita Gradin[18].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Roine Carlsson[19].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Gertrud Sigurdsen[20].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Sven Hulterström[21].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Ingela Thalén[22].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Bengt Lindqvist[23].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Kjell-Olof Feldt[24].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Odd Engström[25].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Bengt K.Å. Johansson[26].
- Carlsson I Cabinet's has part is recorded as Odd Engström[27].
Why It Matters
Carlsson I Cabinet has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]