Government of Lula (2003–2007)
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Government of Lula (2003–2007)
Summary
Government of Lula (2003–2007) is a cabinet[1]. Government of Lula (2003–2007) draws 6 Wikipedia views per month (cabinet category, ranking #87 of 306).[2]
Key Facts
- Government of Lula (2003–2007) is in the country of Brazil[3].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s instance of is recorded as cabinet[4].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s instance of is recorded as cabinet of Brazil[5].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s follows is recorded as cabinet of ministers of Fernando Henrique Cardoso (second administration, 1999 - 2002)[6].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s followed by is recorded as Government of Lula (2007–2011)[7].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s part of is recorded as first presidency of Lula da Silva[8].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s Commons category is recorded as Ministers of Lula (1st)[9].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Agnelo Queiroz[10].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Agenor Álvares[11].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Aldo Rebelo[12].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Alfredo Nascimento[13].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Altemir Gregolin[14].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Álvaro Augusto Ribeiro Costa[15].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Amir Lando[16].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Anderson Adauto Pereira[17].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Antonio Palocci[18].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Celso Amorim[19].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Ciro Gomes[20].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Cristovam Buarque[21].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Dilma Rousseff[22].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Eduardo Campos[23].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Emília Fernandes[24].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Eunício Oliveira[25].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Fernando Haddad[26].
- Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s has part is recorded as Fernando Schmidt[27].
Body
Founding
+2003-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Government of Lula (2003–2007)[28].
Identity
Government of Lula (2003–2007)'s part of is recorded as first presidency of Lula da Silva[8]. Its follows is recorded as cabinet of ministers of Fernando Henrique Cardoso (second administration, 1999 - 2002)[6]. Its followed by is recorded as Government of Lula (2007–2011)[7].
Dissolution
Dissolution dates include +2007-01-01T00:00:00Z[29] and +2006-12-31T00:00:00Z[30].
Why It Matters
Government of Lula (2003–2007) draws 6 Wikipedia views per month (cabinet category, ranking #87 of 306).[2] Government of Lula (2003–2007) is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[31]