Second Cabinet of D.F. Malan


11th cabinet of Union of South Africa
(since 1909 South Africa Act)
1953

D.F. Malan
Date formed 15 April 1953 (1953-04-15)
Date dissolved 16 April 1958 (1958-04-16)
People and organisations
Head of government Prime Minister Hans Strydom
Head of government's history Prime Minister D.F. Malan
Head of state Queen Elizabeth II
Number of ministers 12
Ministers removed
(Death/resignation/dismissal)
2
Member party National Party
Status in legislature Majority
Opposition party United Party
Opposition leader Koos Strauss
History
Election(s) 1953
Legislature term(s) 5 years and 1 day
Predecessor Malan I
Successor Strydom
11th Cabinet of Union of South Africa.
(c.1953)
Front (left to right): S. P. le Roux; J. C. Strydom; Dr. D. F. Malan; Dr. E. G. Jansen; N. C. Havenga; C. R. Swart and P. O. Sauer. Back (left to right): E. H. Louw; Dr T. E. Donges; F. C. Erasmus; B. J. Schoeman;J. F. Naude; Sen. H. Verwoerd; J. H. Viljoen; and Dr. K. Bremer.

Malan Retires

The Prime Minister announced his retirement, to a "dumbfounded" cabinet on 12 October 1954 – it was thought to be linked to his health. The party favourite, E.H. Louw, was suggested by Die Burger take over.[1] But in the ensuing months, a race broke out between N.C. Havenga and Hans Strydom – who wanted to accelerate the "nationalist objectives".[2]

On 30 November 1954, Hans Strydom was announced as D.F. Malan's successor.[3]

Cabinet

Post Minister Term Party
Prime Minister Hans Strydom 1954 NP
Dr. D.F. Malan 1948 1954 NP
Deputy Prime Minister Adv. C.R. Swart 1954 1958 NP
N.C. Havenga 1948 1954 NP
Minister of Agriculture The Hon. S.P. le Roux MP 1948 1958 NP
Minister of Defence The Hon. F.C. Erasmus MP 1948 NP
Minister of Economic Affairs The Hon. E.H. Louw MP 1948 1954 NP
Minister of Education, Arts and Science The Hon. J.H. Viljoen MP 1950 1957 NP
Minister of Finance The Hon. Tom Naudé MP 1956 1958 NP
The Hon. E.H. Louw MP 1954 1956 NP
The Hon. N.C. Havenga MP 1948 1954 NP
Minister of Foreign Affairs The Hon. E.H. Louw MP 1955 NP
Hans Strydom 1954 1955 NP
Dr. D.F. Malan 1948 1954 NP
Minister of Forestry The Hon. F.C. Erasmus MP 1956 NP
The Hon. J.H. Viljoen MP 1954 1956 NP
Minister Health The Hon. J.H. Viljoen MP 1956 1957 NP
The Hon. Tom Naudé MP 1954 1956 NP
The Hon. A.J.R. van Rhijn MP 1953 1954 NP
Minister of Interior Affairs The Hon. T.E. Dönges MP 1948 1958 NP
Minister of Justice The Hon. C.R. Swart MP 1948 NP
Minister of Labour The Hon. Jan de Klerk MP 1954 NP
The Hon. B.J. Schoeman MP 1948 1954 NP
Minister of Lands and Irrigation The Hon. P.O. Sauer MP 1954 NP
The Hon. Hans Strydom MP 1948 1954 NP
Minister of Native Affairs The Hon. Hendrik Verwoerd MP 1950 NP
Minister of Posts and Telegraphs The Hon. Albert Hertzog MP 1954 NP
The Hon. Tom Naudé MP 1950 1954 NP
Minister of Public Works The Hon. Jan de Klerk MP 1954 1958 NP
The Hon. B.J. Schoeman MP 1950 1954 NP
Minister of Social Welfare The Hon. J.J. Serfontein MP 1954 NP
The Hon. J.H. Viljoen MP 1953 1954 NP
Minister of Transport The Hon. B.J. Schoeman MP 1954 NP
The Hon. P.O. Sauer MP 1948 1954 NP

Citations

  1. "Malan Retires From Ministry" (18). The Cornell Daily Sun. Associated Press. 13 October 1954. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  2. "Malan Gets A Successor". The Milwaukee Journal. Associated Press. 30 November 1954. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  3. "An ageing anachronism: D.F. Malan as prime minister, 1948–1954". Kronos. 36 (1). November 2010. Retrieved 10 September 2015.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.