2003 in politics

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Events[]

January 1[]

January 2-January 7[]

January 8-January 14[]

January 15-January 31[]

  • January 15: Lucio Gutiérrez takes office as president of Ecuador; Nina Pacari Vega becomes foreign minister.
  • January 15: The Chief Minister of Maharashtra resigns, he is later replaced by Sushil Kumar Shinde.
  • January 15: Mark Sanford takes office as Governor of South Carolina and Robert L. Ehrlich as Governor of Maryland.
  • January 17: Hans Enoksen of the forms a new Greenland government with the .
  • January 18: Phil Bredesen takes office as Governor of Tennessee.
  • January 19: Meng Xuenong is elected mayor of Beijing.
  • January 19: In Cuban parliamentary elections all candidates are elected unopposed.
  • January 20: Bob Riley takes office as Governor of Alabama.
  • January 21: Ed Rendell takes office as Governor of Pennsylvania.
  • January 24: becomes prime minister of Adygeya.

February[]

  • February 1: becomes president of the government of Basel-Stadt.
  • February 3: John Snow is made U.S. treasury secretary.
  • February 4: Yugoslavia is renamed to Serbia and Montenegro converting the federal republic to a looser union.
  • February 5: The head of the pro-Moscow administration of Chechnya, announces the dismissal of their Prime Minister, who is later replaced by Anatoly Popov.
  • February 6: Yegor Borisov becomes prime minister of Sakha.
  • February 9: Presidential elections in Montenegro fail again when the turnout is below 50%.
  • February 14: New high commissioner Sandra Lee-Vercoe arrives at Niue.
  • February 16: Tassos Papadopoulos wins presidential elections in Cyprus.
  • February 17: Oleg Budargin takes office as governor of Taymyr.
  • February 25: Roh Moo Hyun takes office as president of South Korea; Parliament later approves Goh Kun as prime minister, who would later appoint Yoon Young Kwan as foreign minister.
  • February 28: Silvan Shalom is approved as Foreign Minister of Israel.

March–June[]

July–September[]

  • July 16: Coup in São Tomé and Príncipe, reversed on July 23.
  • August 11: Moses Blah replaces Charles Taylor as president of Liberia.
  • September 9: Indiana lieutenant governor Joe Kernan becomes acting governor when governor Frank O'Bannon suffers a stroke, and is sworn in as governor when O'Bannon dies a few days later. Both are Democrats.
  • September 14: Sweden rejects adopting the Euro in a referendum. (Results.)
  • September 14: Estonia approves joining the European Union in a referendum.
  • September 14: Coup in Guinea-Bissau.
  • September 18: Liberal Democrat Sarah Teather is elected in a London By-election to succeed Paul Daisley, who died in June 2003.

October 1-October 7[]

  • October 2: Canadian province of Ontario conducts a general election to elect members to the Ontario government. The election, which was called by Ontario Progressive Conservative Party Premier Ernie Eves, is majority won by the Dalton McGuinty-led Ontario Liberal Party.
  • October 3: Richard Butler is sworn in as Governor of Tasmania.
  • October 3: Laila Freivalds is appointed foreign minister of Sweden.
  • October 4: Democrat Kathleen Babineaux Blanco and Republican Bobby Jindal advance to a runoff to decide who becomes Louisiana Governor.
  • October 5: Chairman of the Palestinian Authority Yasir Arafat installs Ahmed Qureia as prime minister of an emergency cabinet.
  • October 5: Valentina Matviyenko is elected governor of Saint Petersburg over .
  • October 7: Teresa Patrício Gouveia becomes Foreign Minister of Portugal replacing .
  • October 7: Giovanni Lajolo is appointed foreign minister of the Vatican.
  • October 7: In California, Democratic Governor Gray Davis is recalled. Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger is elected to replace Davis.

October 8-October 31[]

November 1-November 7[]

November 8-November 30[]

December[]

Deaths[]

January–February[]

  • January 5: Roy Jenkins, former president of the European Commission (1977–1981)
  • January 6: Sir Gerald Cash, former Governor-General of the Bahamas (1979–1988)
  • January 10: C. Douglas Dillon, former treasury secretary of the United States (1961–1965)
  • January 12: Leopoldo Galtieri, former president of Argentina (1981–1982)
  • January 27: Henryk Jabłoński, former chairman of the Council of State of Poland (1972–1985)
  • February 1: Richard Lyng, former U.S. secretary of agriculture (1986–1989)
  • February 13: Walt W. Rostow, former U.S. national security advisor (1966–1968)
  • February 15: Francisque Ravony, former Prime Minister of Madagascar (1993–1995)
  • February 20: Orville L. Freeman, former U.S. secretary of agriculture (1961–1969)

March–August[]

September–December[]

See also[]

External links[]

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