Vennola I cabinet
Vennola I Cabinet | |
|---|---|
5th Cabinet of Finland | |
| Date formed | 15 August 1919 |
| Date dissolved | 15 March 1920 |
| People and organisations | |
| Prime Minister | Juho Vennola |
| Total no. of members | 14 |
| Member parties | National Progressive Agrarian League |
| Status in legislature | Minority government |
| History | |
| Predecessor | Kaarlo Castrén |
| Successor | Erich |
![]() |
|---|
Juho Vennola's first cabinet was the fifth Government of Republic of Finland. The cabinet's time period was August 15, 1919 – March 15, 1920. It was a minority government.[1]
Assembly
| Portfolio | Minister | Took office | Left office | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prime Minister | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | National Progressive | ||
| Minister for Foreign Affairs | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | National Progressive | ||
| Minister of Justice | Henrik Kahelin | September 15, 1919 | January 30, 1920 | National Progressive | |
| Minister of War | Karl Emil Berg | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | Public servant | |
| Minister of the Interior | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | National Progressive | ||
| Minister of Finance | September 15, 1919 | March 2, 1920 | National Progressive | ||
| Minister of Church and Education | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | National Progressive | ||
| Minister of Agriculture | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | Agrarian | ||
| Deputy Minister of Agriculture | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | Agrarian | ||
| Minister of Transport and Public Works | Santeri Pohjanpalo | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | National Progressive | |
| Minister of Trade and Industry | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | National Progressive | ||
| Minister of Social Affairs | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | Agrarian | ||
| Minister of Food | September 15, 1919 | March 15, 1920 | National Progressive | ||
| Minister without portfolio | September 15, 1919 | January 5, 1920 | Agrarian | ||
References
- ^ "Governments and Ministers since 1917". Finnish Government. Archived from the original on 2018-01-10. Retrieved 2018-01-14.
