Fontaine Ministry
The Fontaine Ministry formed the government of Luxembourg from 1 August 1848 to 2 December 1848. It was headed by Gaspard-Théodore-Ignace de la Fontaine.
Background
After the Constitution came into force on 1 August 1848, the first elections to the Chamber of Deputies were organised on 28 September. This had only become possible after popular unrest had broken out under governor Gaspard-Théodore-Ignace de la Fontaine in March 1848. On 15 March, the government and King-Grand-Duke William II sought conciliation with the people. Censorship was abolished, and a Constituent Assembly was called in Ettelbrück, which was to draft a new constitution. The text of the new constitution, which was modeled on the liberal Belgian constitution, was adopted on 23 June.After the elections, de la Fontaine, Vendelin Jurion, Charles-Mathias Simons and Jean Ulveling were retained as members of the government; Théodore Pescatore resigned and was replaced with Jean-Pierre André.
The members of the new government received new titles: de la Fontaine was appointed President of the Government Council, and his "ministers" now had the title of "Administrator general".
The new constitution allowed the Chamber to exercise a great deal of control over the government. The government had to account for its actions in the Chamber, the Acts of the King-Grand-Duke were counter-signed by the government and the Chamber voted on the budget.
Composition
- Gaspard-Théodore-Ignace de la Fontaine: President of the Government Council, Administrator-general for Foreign Affairs, Justice, and Culture
- Vendelin Jurion: Administrator-general for the Interior
- Charles-Mathias Simons: Administrator-general for Communal Affairs
- Jean-Pierre André: Administrator-general ad interim for Public Works, Communes and Military Affairs
- Jean Ulveling: Administrator-general for Finance
Domestic policy