Thursday, October 23, 2014

Belgium"s youthful new PM sworn in

11 October 2014 Last updated at 11:28 The chief of Belgium Belgium’s new government is a coalition of four centre-right parties Belgium’s King Philippe has sworn in a new centre-right government, more than four months after the general election.

It is led by French-speaking liberal Charles Michel, 38, who will be Belgium’s youngest PM since 1841.

The government is the first to include ministers from the separatist New Flemish Alliance (N-VA) party. It has vowed to cut government spending and balance the national budget.

Belgium is notorious for long political deadlocks following elections.

It took 541 days to form the country’s previous, Socialist-led government.

The country is also deeply divided linguistically. Dutch-speaking parties performed well in the elections, but they chose to form a four-party coalition and appoint a French-speaking prime minister.

Chairman of Belgian MR Party and Government Formator, Charles Michel, arrives for the negotiations for a new center-right federal government, Brussels, Belgium, 11 September 2014 Charles Michel is a French-speaker who heads a coalition of mainly Dutch-speaking parties

The N-VA, which campaigns for more autonomy for northern, Dutch-speaking Belgium, came first in the May elections.

Its leader, Bart De Wever, will remain mayor of Antwerp and did not join the government.

As well as a commitment to lower taxes, the new government plans to raise the pension age from 65 to 66 in 2025 and to 67 in 2030.

Outgoing prime minister, French-speaking socialist Elio di Rupo, has vowed to lead the political opposition to the policies.


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Belgium"s youthful new PM sworn in