Minister and deputy prime minister Helmut Kohl at the
Ministry of General Affairs on 13 September 1978. and Prime Minister Dries van Agt during a press conference at
Schiphol Airport on 21 April 1979.
Margaret Thatcher and Prime Minister Dries van Agt at the
Catshuis on 6 February 1981.
Helmut Schmidt and Prime Minister Dries van Agt during a press conference at
Schiphol Airport on 9 July 1982. in
Het Torentje on 18 April 2011 Van Agt entered politics as a member of the
Catholic People's Party, which merged with the other two major Christian democratic parties in 1980 to form the
Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA). From 1968 to 1971, Van Agt was Professor of Criminal Law at the Catholic University of Nijmegen. From 1971 to 1973, he served as
Minister of Justice in the
first and
second Biesheuvel cabinets. He caused outrage when he tried to pardon the last three Nazi war criminals still in Dutch prisons (known as
The Breda Four) in 1972. From 1973 to 1977, he served as
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Justice in the
Den Uyl cabinet.
Leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal In 1976, Van Agt was elected the first
Leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal, then still a federation of the three confessional parties: the
Christian Historical Union, the
Catholic People's Party and the
Anti-Revolutionary Party, which contested with a united list for the first time in the
1977 general election (the merger followed in 1980). With Van Agt as its
lead candidate, the
Christian Democratic Appeal reversed years of decline in 1977 and returned to power.
Prime minister in the Van Agt I cabinet In the parliamentary election of May 1977, the
Labour Party (PvdA) obtained its largest number of seats, so a second Den Uyl cabinet seemed likely. However, the tension between the
Catholic People's Party and the Labour Party in the last coalition, combined with the fact that a coalition between the
Christian Democratic Appeal and the
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) was possible, the talks failed after a period of seven months. Eventually Van Agt negotiated a deal with VVD leader
Hans Wiegel. From 19 December 1977 to 11 September 1981, Van Agt served as Prime Minister of the Netherlands and Minister of General Affairs in the Van Agt I cabinet.
Prime minister in the Van Agt II cabinet In
1981 general election, the CDA and the VVD both lost parliamentary seats, so a continuation of the CDA–VVD coalition was not possible, and Van Agt was forced to enter into a coalition with the Labour Party and the
Democrats 66 (which, under Jan Terlouw, had gained a significant number of seats). Three months of difficult negotiations resulted in the
Van Agt II cabinet (11 September 1981 – 29 May 1982). In this composition, Van Agt worked with
Joop den Uyl again as Den Uyl was made Deputy Prime Minister and "super minister" of Social Affairs and Employment. The characterological and political differences led to several divisions, and in May 1982 the government fell. The personal strife between Van Agt and Den Uyl had deteriorated to such an extent that when Den Uyl died from a
brain tumor in 1987, Van Agt was not invited to the memorial service by the family. Den Uyl's wife Liesbeth argued that Van Agt had prevented the second Den Uyl cabinet from forming in 1977.
Prime minister in the Van Agt III cabinet The caretaker government continued as a minority cabinet, with only ministers from the parties
Christian Democratic Appeal and
Democrats 66, in the Van Agt III cabinet. For replacing the six
Labour Party ministers, five new Christian Democratic Appeal and Democrats 66 ministers were appointed, while Van Agt, in addition to being prime minister, took the position of
Minister of Foreign Affairs upon him. A new parliamentary election was planned for September 1982. Although Van Agt by this point was worn out, he was persuaded to lead his party's list again, but shortly after the election he withdrew as a candidate for prime minister and was succeeded by
Ruud Lubbers. ==After politics==