Jan Fischer's Cabinet

As the Government Fischer on 8 May 2009 to 25 June 2010 ( a caretaker to 13 July 2010) is referred to incumbent government of the Czech Republic. It was headed by Prime Minister Jan Fischer, consisted of high officials and was used after the resignation of the government Topolánek II as a transitional government.

Fischer, head of the Czech Statistical Office, was asked to form a transitional government on April 9, 2009 by President Václav Klaus. Following agreement of the political parties, the former ruling parties (ODS, KDU- CSL and SZ) should eight non-party members of the government and put the formerly opposition social democratic CSSD seven. The government was appointed on 8 May of Václav Klaus.

The transitional government remained until the 2010 election in office. The original plan was that the government up to the election, which was held on 9 and 10 October 2009 should remain in office. On 10 September 2009, however, the Constitutional Court declared the early election for the House of Representatives is unconstitutional.

Among the most frequently mentioned in foreign functions of government was the continuation of the Czech EU Presidency in 2009, while held by members of the Government Fischer chairs the Council of the European Union.

The government was replaced on 13 July 2010 by the Government Necas.

Minister

The first environment minister Ladislav Miko, Director in the Directorate General Environment of the European Commission, was suspended by the Commission on limited time. After the scheduled elections were postponed, he left the office and moved back to Brussels. His successor Dusík resigned after a dispute over the renewal of the ČEZ coal power plant Prunéřov on March 18, 2010., In the short time the Agriculture Minister Jakub Šebesta took office. On 15 April 2010 Ruth Bízková was appointed. This is widely criticized because they worked for the coal-fired power plant division ČEZ before.

The Minister for European Affairs Štefan Füle has been proposed in the Barroso II Commission. His office took over Juraj Chmiel. The Minister for Human Rights and Minorities Michael Kocáb resigned after an affair with his spokeswoman Lejla Abbasova was known.

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