Prime Minister of the Austro-Hungarian-Slavonic Empire | |
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Coat of Arms of Danubia | |
Seat | Chancellery Building, Ballhausplatz, Innere Stadt, Vienna |
Nominator | Federal Parliament |
Appointer | The Monarch Based on Appointee's ability to gain majority support in the Federal Parliament |
Term length | 3 years, renewable four times |
Constituting instrument | Constitution of Danubia |
Formation | 6 April 1917 |
First holder | Jodok Fink |
The Prime Minister of Danubia (known before 1943 as the Prime Minister of Austria-Hungary) is the head of government of Danubia. The prime minister is elected to a thee-year term, which can be renewed four times as per the 2005 Constitutional referendum.
The post was created as appeasement by Emperor Rudolf I in 1917, unifying the previous posts of Minister-President of Austria and Prime Minister of Hungary. This was achieved through protests that began during the Great War and sought to reorganize the country's monarchy. Even though Austria-Hungary was not militarily involved in the conflict it was profoundly affected by it both socially and economically.
Name | Picture | Term began | Term ended | Previous position | Party | Nationality |
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Jodok Fink | 6 April 1917 | 6 April 1923 | President of the Austrian Parliament | Christian Conservative Party | Austrian | |
Ljubomir Davidović | 6 April 1923 | 6 April 1926 | Labour Leader | Liberal Unity | Serbian | |
Sándor Simononyi-Semadan | 6 April 1926 | 6 April 1929 | Speaker of the Hungarian Assembly | Catholic Party | Hungarian | |
István Bethlen | 6 April 1929 | 6 April 1938 | Austro-Hungarian Secretary of State | Liberal Unity | Hungarian | |
Leopold Figl | 6 April 1938 | 6 April 1944 | Mayor of Vienna | Christian Conservative Party | Austrian | |
Josip Broz | 6 April 1944 | 6 April 1947 | Governor of Croatia | Liberal Unity | Croatian | |
Mátyás Rákosi | 6 April 1947 | 6 April 1956 | Governor of Hungary | Hungarian | ||
Mika Spiljak | 6 April 1956 | 6 April 1971 | Governor of Croatia | Croatian | ||
Alexander Dubček | 6 April 1971 | 6 April 1980 | Governor of Slovakia | Slovak | ||
Savka Dabčević-Kučar | 6 April 1980 | 6 April 1983 | Mayor of Zagreb | National Conservative Party | Croatian | |
Sándor Kocsis | 6 April 1983 | 6 April 1998 | General Secretary of the Germanic League | Centre Party | Hungarian | |
Helmut Zilk | 6 April 1998 | 6 April 2004 | Governor of Austria | Liberal Unity | Austrian | |
Danilo Türk | 6 April 2004 | 6 April 2007 | Governor of Slovenia | National Conservative Party | Slovenian | |
Jan Švejnar | 6 April 2007 | 6 April 2010 | Governor of Czech Kingdom | Centre Party | Czech | |
Andre Kiska | 6 April 2010 | 6 April 2016 | Mayor of Bratislavia | Liberal Unity | Slovak | |
József Pálinkás | 6 April 2016 | 6 April 2019 | Minister of Education | Hungarian | ||
Šefik Džaferović | 6 April 2019 | Incumbent | Governor of Bosnia | National Conservative Party | Bosnian |
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