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2003 in politics

Years in politics: 2001-2002-2003-2004-2005 - list of years in politics

See also:

Events

January 1

  • January 1: Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva takes office as president of Brazil. His cabinet includes Celso Amorim as foreign minister; Antônio Waldez Góes da Silva becomes Governor of Amapá, Carlos Eduardo de Sousa Braga becomes governor of Amazonas, Paulo César Hartung Gomes becomes governor of Espírito Santo, Blairo Borges Maggi becomes governor of Mato Grosso, Simão Robison Oliveira Jatene becomes governor of Pará, Cássio Rodrigues da Cunha Lima becomes governor of Paraíba, Roberto Requião de Mello e Silva becomes governor of Paraná, José Wellington Barroso de Araújo Dias becomes governor of Piauí, Wilma Maria de Faria becomes governor of Rio Grande do Norte, Germano Antônio Rigotto becomes governor of Rio Grande do Sul, Ivo Narciso Cassol becomes governor of Rondônia, and Marcelo de Carvalho Miranda becomes governor of Tocantins.
  • January 1: Pavel Chernov takes office as prime minister of Karelia.
  • January 1: Pascal Couchepin takes office as President of the Confederation and Interior Minister of Switzerland; Ruth Metzler-Arnold becomes vice president; Claude Lässer becomes president of the Council of State of Fribourg, Stefan Engler president of the government of Graubünden, Gérald Schaller president of the government of Canton of Jura, Margrit Fischer-Willimann Schultheiss of Luzern, Christian Wanner Landammann of Solothurn, and Jean-Claude Mermoud president of the Council of State of Vaud, and Walter Suter Landammann of Zug.
  • January 1: Kenneth W. Dam becomes acting treasury secretary of the United States; Bill Richardson takes office as Governor of New Mexico and Jennifer Granholm as Governor of Michigan.

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 Siumut party forms a new Greenland government with the Atassut party.
  • 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: Gennady Mikichura becomes prime minister of Adygeya.

February

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 8-October 31

November 1-November 7

November 8-November 30

December

Deaths

January–February

March–August

  • March 1: Fidel Sánchez Hernández, former president of El Salvador (1967–1972)
  • March 10: Bernard Dowiyogo president of Nauru.
  • March 12: Zoran Đinđić prime minister of Serbia
  • March 30: Valentin Pavlov, former prime minister of the Soviet Union (1991)
  • April 30: Aureliano Chaves, former Brazilian vice president (1979–1985)
  • May 15: Constantin Dăscălescu, former prime minister of Romania (1982–1989)
  • June 1?: Johnny Paul Koroma, President of Sierra Leone 1997-1998.
  • June 10: Donald Regan, former U.S. treasury secretary (1981–1985) and White House chief of staff (1985–1987)
  • June 25: Lester Maddox segregationist governor of Georgia from 1967 to 1971.
  • June 26: Strom Thurmond, longtime U.S. senator
  • August 16: Idi Amin, former president of Uganda (1971–1979)
  • August 19: Carlos Roberto Reina, former president of Honduras (1994–1998)
  • August 20: Igor Farkhutdinov, Russian politician, governor of Sakhalin (killed in plane crash).
  • August 23: Michael Kijana Wamalwa, sitting vice-president of Kenya

September–December

External links

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