First Rutte cabinet
0 sources
First Rutte cabinet
Summary
First Rutte cabinet is a Cabinet of the Netherlands[1]. It draws 93 Wikipedia views per month (cabinet_of_the_netherlands category, ranking #8 of 42).[2]
Key Facts
- First Rutte cabinet's head of government is recorded as Mark Rutte[3].
- First Rutte cabinet's instance of is recorded as Cabinet of the Netherlands[4].
- First Rutte cabinet followed Fourth Balkenende cabinet[5].
- First Rutte cabinet was followed by Second Rutte cabinet[6].
- First Rutte cabinet's Commons category is recorded as Cabinet Rutte I[7].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Mark Rutte[8].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Piet Hein Donner[9].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Liesbeth Spies[10].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Uri Rosenthal[11].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Hans Hillen[12].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Maxime Verhagen[13].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Jan Kees de Jager[14].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Gerd Leers[15].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Melanie Maas Geesteranus[16].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Marja van Bijsterveldt[17].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Henk Kamp[18].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Ivo Opstelten[19].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Edith Schippers[20].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Ben Knapen[21].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Henk Bleker[22].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Frans Weekers[23].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Joop Atsma[24].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Halbe Zijlstra[25].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Paul de Krom[26].
- First Rutte cabinet comprises Fred Teeven[27].
Body
Founding
October 14, 2010 marks the founding of First Rutte cabinet[28].
Identity
First Rutte cabinet followed Fourth Balkenende cabinet[5]. It was followed by Second Rutte cabinet[6].
Dissolution
First Rutte cabinet was dissolved in November 5, 2012[29].
Why It Matters
First Rutte cabinet draws 93 Wikipedia views per month (cabinet_of_the_netherlands category, ranking #8 of 42).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30] It is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]