De Jong cabinet

{{Short description|Dutch cabinet, 1967 to 1971}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}}

{{Infobox government cabinet

| cabinet_name = De Jong cabinet

| cabinet_type =

| jurisdiction = the Netherlands

| flag = Flag of the Netherlands.svg

| flag_border = true

| incumbent =

| image = Kabinet 1967-04-05 - SFA003001469.jpg

| image_size = 300px

| caption = The installation of the De Jong cabinet on 5 April 1967

| image2 = ZetelsDeJong.svg

| image_size2 = 250px

| date_formed = {{Start date|1967|04|05|df=y}}

| date_dissolved = {{End date|1971|07|06|df=y}}
{{Age in years and days|1967|04|05|1971|07|06}} in office
(Demissionary from {{Start date|1971|04|28|df=y}})

| government_head = Piet de Jong

| government_head_history =

| deputy_government_head = Johan Witteveen
Joop Bakker

| state_head = Queen Juliana

| members_number = 14

| former_members_number = 1

| total_number = 15

| political_party = Catholic People's Party
(KVP)
People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy

(VVD)
Anti-Revolutionary Party
(ARP)
Christian Historical Union
(CHU)

| legislature_status = Centre-right
Majority government

| opposition_party =

| opposition_leader =

| election = 1967 election

| last_election = 1971 election

| legislature_term = 1967–1971

| incoming_formation = 1967 formation

| outgoing_formation = 1971 formation

| previous = Zijlstra cabinet

| successor = First Biesheuvel cabinet

| state_head_title = Monarch

| government_head_title = Prime Minister

| deputy_government_head_title = Deputy Prime Minister

}}

{{Politics of the Netherlands}}

The De Jong cabinet was the executive branch of the Dutch Government from 5 April 1967 until 6 July 1971. The cabinet was formed by the christian-democratic Catholic People's Party (KVP), Anti-Revolutionary Party (ARP) and Christian Historical Union (CHU) and the conservative-liberal People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) after the election of 1967. The cabinet was a centre-right coalition and had a substantial majority in the House of Representatives with prominent Catholic politician Piet de Jong the Minister of Defence in the previous cabinet serving as Prime Minister. Prominent Liberal politician Johan Witteveen a former Minister of Finances served as Deputy Prime Minister and returned as Minister of Finance, prominent Protestant politician Joop Bakker the Minister of Economic Affairs in the previous cabinet served as Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Transport and Water Management and was given the portfolio of Suriname and Netherlands Antilles Affairs.

The cabinet served in the final years of the tumultuous 1960s and the beginning of the radical 1970s. Domestically it had to deal with the peak of the counterculture but it was able to implement several major social reforms to education, social security, the introduction of value-added taxes and it had to deal with several crises involving Moluccan nationalists. Internationally it oversaw improvements in relations with the former Dutch East Indies, growing protests against the Vietnam War and the fallout of the Soviet Union invasion of Czechoslovakia following the Prague Spring. The cabinet suffered no major internal conflicts and completed its entire term and was succeeded by the First Biesheuvel cabinet following the election of 1971.{{in lang|nl}} [http://www.geschiedenis24.nl/nieuws/2005/december/P-J-S-Piet-de-Jong.html P. J. S. (Piet) de Jong 5 April 1967 – 6 juli 1971], Geschiedenis24, 9 December 2005{{in lang|nl}} [https://archive.today/20120801011743/http://www.groene.nl/2005/43/de-putschisten-zijn-onder-ons De putschisten zijn onder ons], De Groene Amsterdammer, 28 October 2005{{cite web|url=https://historiek.net/het-succesvolle-kabinet-de-jong-1967-1971/40003/|title=Het succesvolle kabinet-De Jong 1967–1971|publisher=Historiek|date=28 January 2014|access-date=16 March 2018|language=nl}}

Formation

Following the fall of the Cals cabinet on 14 October 1966 the Labour Party (PvdA) left the coalition, subsequently Queen Juliana appointed Senator Jelle Zijlstra (ARP), a former Minister of Finance as Prime Minister to form a rump cabinet with the Catholic People's Party and the Anti-Revolutionary Party. On 22 November 1966 the Zijlstra cabinet was installed and served as a caretaker government until the election of 1967.

After the election on 15 February 1967 the Catholic People's Party was the winner of the election even after losing 8 seats and had now a total of 40 seats in the House of Representatives. Incumbent Prime Minister Jelle Zijlstra was appointed as Informateur by Queen Juliana to start the cabinet formation process. After a first round of talks the Catholic People's Party, People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, Anti-Revolutionary Party and the Christian Historical Union agreed to form a coalition. On 6 March 1967, Queen Juliana appointed Vice-President of the Council of State Louis Beel (KVP), a former Prime Minister as the new Informateur to start the next formation phase.

On 9 March 1967 incumbent Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries Barend Biesheuvel, the Leader of the Anti-Revolutionary Party was asked to form a new cabinet and was asked to become Formateur. The negotiations were troubled by objections from the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy about prospect of Barend Biesheuvel as Prime Minister because he served in the previous Centre-left Cals cabinet. On 20 March 1967 after long negotiations between the parties, Barend Biesheuvel failed to form a cabinet. To break the deadlock the Catholic People's Party suggested that incumbent Minister of Defence Piet de Jong (KVP) would be a good candidate to form a new cabinet. Piet de Jong a former Naval officer who served as a World War II submarine commander had a good reputation as a pragmatic minister and was seen as a compromise candidate. On 21 March 1967 Piet de Jong was tasked with forming a new cabinet and was appointed as Formateur. On 4 April 1967 the cabinet formation was completed and the De Jong cabinet was installed the next day.

Term

It was the first Cabinet of the Netherlands after World War II that completed a full term without any internal conflicts. The cabinet was confronted with a demand for democratic reforms in the society and it decided to democratise colleges and universities after the famous maagdenhuisbezetting. Plans were made to modernise politics by establishing an electoral system with districts or a chosen prime minister, but these plans were not implemented. Meanwhile, a pay pause due to the decision of employers and employees to raise wages was partly revoked after anti-government demonstrations and strikes. More unrest took shape in demonstrations against the war in Vietnam. Internationally, relations with Indonesia improved, resulting in a visit by president Suharto, which was, however, overshadowed by the occupation of the Indonesian embassy by Moluccans. The Soviet Union invasion in Czechoslovakia was seen as a reason to increase the defence budget.{{cite book|author1=Jan Willem Brouwer|author2=Johan van Merriënboer|title=Van buitengaats naar Binnenhof: P.J.S. de Jong, een biografie|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oNJoAAAAMAAJ&q=Piet+de+Jong|year=2001|publisher=Sdu Uitgevers|isbn=9789012087742|page=10}}{{in lang|nl}} [http://www.nrc.nl/nieuwsthema/mei68/article1891625.ece/De_oorlog_was_de_oorzaak_van_geduvel_in_68 ‘De oorlog was de oorzaak van geduvel in ’68’], NRC Handelsblad, 10 May 2008

=Changes=

On 7 January 1970, Minister of Economic Affairs Leo de Block (KVP) resigned after disagreeing with the cabinets decision to increase the wages in the metal industry, but another reason was that he had lost the credibility to remain in office after the House of Representatives was highly critical in his handling of the rising inflation after the introduction of the value-added tax (BTW) on 1 January 1969. Minister of Finance Johan Witteveen (VVD) served as acting Minister of Economic Affairs until 14 January 1970 when Member of the House of Representatives Roelof Nelissen (KVP) was appointed as his successor.

Cabinet members

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
colspan=3 | Ministers

! colspan=3 | Title/Ministry/Portfolio(s)

! Term of office

! Party

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Piet de Jong 1970.jpg

| Captain
Piet de Jong
(1915–2016)

| Prime Minister

| General Affairs

|

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Catholic
People's Party

rowspan=2 style="background:{{party color|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy}};"|

| rowspan=2 | File:Johan Witteveen 1963.jpg

| rowspan=2 | Dr.
Johan Witteveen
(1921–2019)

| Deputy
Prime Minister

| rowspan=2 | Finance

| rowspan=2 |

| rowspan=2 | 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| rowspan=2 | People's Party
for Freedom and
Democracy

Minister
rowspan=3 style="background:{{party color|Anti Revolutionary Party}};"|

| rowspan=3 | File:Joop Bakker 1970 (1).jpg

| rowspan=3 | Joop Bakker
(1921–2003)

| Deputy
Prime Minister

| rowspan=2 | Transport and
Water Management

| rowspan=2 |

| rowspan=3 | 5 April 1967 –
6 July 197

| rowspan=3 | Anti-Revolutionary
Party

Minister
Minister

| Interior

| • Suriname and
Netherlands
Antilles Affairs

style="background:{{party color|Christian Historical Union}};"|

| File:Henk Beernink 1966 (1).jpg

| Henk Beernink
(1910–1979)

| Minister

| Interior

|

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Christian
Historical Union

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Joseph Luns 1966 (1).jpg

| Joseph Luns
(1911–2002)

| Minister

| Foreign Affairs

|

| 13 October 1956 –
6 July 1971
{{ref_label|Retained|Retained}}

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy}};"|

| File:Carel Polak 1971 (1).jpg

| Carel Polak
(1909–1981)

| Minister

| Justice

|

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| People's Party
for Freedom and
Democracy

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Leo de Block 1969 (1).jpg

| Leo de Block
(1904–1988)

| rowspan=3 | Minister

| rowspan=3 | Economic Affairs

| rowspan=3 |

| 5 April 1967 –
7 January 1970
{{ref_label|Resigned|Res}}

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy}};"|

| File:Johan Witteveen 1963.jpg

| Dr.
Johan Witteveen
(1921–2019)

| 7 January 1970 –
14 January 1970
{{ref_label|Ad Interim|Ad Interim}}

| People's Party
for Freedom and
Democracy

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Roelof Nelissen 1971 (1).jpg

| Roelof Nelissen
(1931–2019)

| 7 January 1970 –
14 January 1970

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy}};"|

| File:Willem den Toom 1971 (1).jpg

| Lieutenant general
Willem den Toom
(1911–1998)

| Minister

| Defence

|

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| People's Party
for Freedom and
Democracy

style="background:{{party color|Anti Revolutionary Party}};"|

| File:Bauke Roolvink 1968 (2).jpg

| Bauke Roolvink
(1912–1979)

| Minister

| Social Affairs
and Health

|

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Anti-Revolutionary
Party

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Gerard Veringa 1977 (1).jpg

| Dr.
Gerard Veringa
(1924–1999)

| Minister

| Education and
Sciences

|

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Pierre Lardinois 1974 (1).jpg

| Pierre Lardinois
(1924–1987)

| Minister

| Agriculture and
Fisheries

|

| 5 April 1967 –
1 January 1973
{{ref_label|Continued|Continued}}

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|Anti Revolutionary Party}};"|

| File:Wim Schut 1968.jpg

| Wim Schut
(1920–2006)

| Minister

| Housing and
Spatial Planning

|

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Anti-Revolutionary
Party

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Klompé, dr. Marga A. M. - SFA001011541.jpg

| Dr.
Marga Klompé
(1912–1986)

| rowspan=3 | Minister

| rowspan=3 | Culture, Recreation
and Social Work

| rowspan=3 |

| 22 November 1966 –
7 January 1971
{{ref_label|Retained|Retained}} {{ref_label|Note|Note}}

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Gerard Veringa 1977 (1).jpg

| Dr.
Gerard Veringa
(1924–1999)

| 7 January 1971 –
22 February 1971
{{ref_label|Acting|Acting}}

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Klompé, dr. Marga A. M. - SFA001011541.jpg

| Dr.
Marga Klompé
(1912–1986)

| 22 February 1971 –
6 July 1971

| Catholic
People's Party

colspan=3 | Minister without portfolio

! colspan=3 | Title/Ministry/Portfolio(s)

! Term of office

! Party

style="background:{{party color|Christian Historical Union}};"|

| File:Berend Jan Udink 1969 (2).jpg

| Bé Udink
(1926–2016)

| Minister

| Foreign Affairs

| • Development
Cooperation

| 5 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Christian
Historical Union

colspan=3 | State Secretaries

! colspan=3 | Title/Ministry/Portfolio(s)

! Term of office

! Party

style="background:{{party color|Christian Historical Union}};"|

| File:Chris van Veen 1972 (1).jpg

| Chris van Veen
(1922–2009)

| State Secretary

| Interior

| • Municipalities
Provinces
• civil service

| 10 May 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Christian
Historical Union

style="background:{{party color|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy}};"|

| File:Hans de Koster 1975 (1).jpg

| Hans de Koster
(1914–1992)

| State Secretary

| Foreign Affairs

| • European Union
Benelux
NATO

| 12 June 1967 –
6 July 1971

| People's Party
for Freedom and
Democracy

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Grapperhaus, F.H.M. - SFA002019211.jpg

| Dr.
Ferd Grapperhaus I
(1927–2010)

| State Secretary

| Finance

| • Fiscal Policy
Tax and Customs
Governmental
Budget

| 10 May 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy}};"|

| File:Klaas Wiersma (1971).jpg

| Dr.
Klaas Wiersma
(1917–1993)

| State Secretary

| Justice

| • Immigration
and Asylum

Penitentiaries

| 20 April 1970 –
6 July 1971

| People's Party
for Freedom and
Democracy

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Louis van Son 1967 (1).jpg

| Louis van Son
(1922–1986)

| State Secretary

| Economic Affairs

| • Trade and Export
Small and
Medium-sized
Businesses

Regional
Development

• Consumer
Protection
Tourism

| 28 November 1966 –
6 July 1971
{{ref_label|Retained|Retained}}

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|Christian Historical Union}};"|

| File:Joop Haex 1963 (1).jpg

| Major General
Joop Haex
(1911–2002)

| rowspan=3 | State Secretary

| rowspan=3 | Defence

| • Army

| 18 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Christian
Historical Union

style="background:{{party color|Anti Revolutionary Party}};"|

| File:Adri van Es aan boord van Hr.Ms. Karel Doorman.jpg

| Vice admiral
Adri van Es
(1913–1994)

| • Navy

| 14 August 1963 –
16 September 1972
{{ref_label|Retained|Retained}} {{ref_label|Continued|Continued}}

| Anti-Revolutionary
Party

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Bob Duynstee 1968 (1).jpg

| Bob Duynstee
(1920–2014)

| • Air Force

| 28 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Catholic
People's Party

style="background:{{party color|Christian Historical Union}};"|

| File:Roelof Kruisinga 1973 (1).jpg

| Dr.
Roelof Kruisinga
(1922–2012)

| State Secretary

| Social Affairs
and Health

| • Primary
Healthcare

Elderly Care
Disability Policy
Medical Ethics

| 18 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Christian
Historical Union

style="background:{{party color|Anti Revolutionary Party}};"|

| File:Hans Grosheide 1963 (1).jpg

| Hans Grosheide
(1930–2022)

| State Secretary

| Education and
Sciences

| • Primary
Education

Secondary
Education

Special
Education

| 3 September 1963 –
6 July 1971
{{ref_label|Retained|Retained}}

| Anti-Revolutionary
Party

style="background:{{party color|People's Party for Freedom and Democracy}};"|

| File:Keyzer, M.J. - SFA008007130.jpg

| Mike Keyzer
(1911–1983)

| State Secretary

| Transport and
Water Management

| • Public
Transport

Aviation
Rail Transport
Water
Management

Weather
Forecasting

| 18 April 1967 –
6 July 1971

| People's Party
for Freedom and
Democracy

style="background:{{party color|Catholic People's Party}};"|

| File:Hein van de Poel (1967).jpg

| Hein van de Poel
(1915–1993)

| State Secretary

| Culture, Recreation
and Social Work

| • Unemployment
• Social Services
Youth Care
• Nature
Culture
Art
• Recreation
Sport

| 29 May 1967 –
6 July 1971

| Catholic
People's Party

:{{note_label|Resigned|Resigned}}

:{{note_label|Retained|Retained from the previous cabinet}}

:{{note_label|Continued|Continued in the next cabinet}}

:{{note_label|Acting|Acting}}

:{{note_label|Ad Interim|Ad Interim}}

:{{note_label|Note|Medical leave of absence from 7 January 1971 until 22 February 1971}}

Trivia

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{Cite book|title=Polarisatie en hoogconjunctuur: Het kabinet-De Jong 1967-1971|isbn=978-94-6105-509-5|year = 2013|publisher=Boom|place=Amsterdam|lang=nl|editor-first=Johan van|editor-last=Merriënboer|editor-first2=Carla van|editor-last2=Baalen}}

{{De Jong cabinet}}

{{Government of the Netherlands}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Jong cabinet, De}}

Category:Cabinets of the Netherlands

Category:1967 establishments in the Netherlands

Category:1971 disestablishments in the Netherlands

Category:Cabinets established in 1967

Category:Cabinets disestablished in 1971