For a detailed history of the Czech Lands see Bohemia, Moravia, and Czechoslovakia.
In response to Slovakia's demands for greater autonomy, Czechoslovakia
was on Jan. 1, 1969, declared a federation. The constituent Czech and
Slovak republics received autonomy over local affairs, with the federal
government responsible for foreign relations, defense, and finance. The
Communist regime collapsed in 1989, and in 1990 economic reforms were
begun that were especially disruptive in Slovakia, which had a
disproportionate share of subsidized state-owned heavy industry. A
strong secessionist movement in Slovakia led to a declaration in 1992
that the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic would separate into
independent states. In response to the imminent breakup of
Czechoslovakia, a new Czech constitution was written. It was implemented
with the birth of the new Czech Republic on Jan. 1, 1993.
Václav Havel,
who had been president of Czechoslovakia, became the Czech Republic's
president; after legislative elections a right-of-center coalition
government came into office, headed by Václav Klaus.
The government moved quickly to privatize state-owned businesses, and
mutual funds became a popular investment vehicle for a public unused to
dealing with a stock market. The Czech Republic actively sought
membership in Western institutions and alliances. In 1994 it became an
associate member of the European Union (it became a full member ten years later), in 1995 it was admitted to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and in 1999 it joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Meanwhile,
the economy faltered in 1997 and Klaus was forced to resign. Austerity
measures were put in place and Josef Tosovsky, a banker, was appointed
caretaker prime minister. Havel was reelected in 1998 and, following
legislative elections later that year, Social Democrat Milos Zeman
became prime minister, vowing to slow privatization and return more
control to the state.
In the 2002 elections the
Social Democrat–led coalition was returned to power, but Zeman, who had
resigned as party leader prior to the election, was replaced as prime
minister by Vladimír Spidla. Václav Klaus was elected president in 2003,
succeeding the retiring Havel. In 2004, after the Social Democrats made
a poor showing in the European Parliament elections, Spidla only
narrowly survived a party confidence vote, and subsequently resigned as
prime minister.
Social Democrat Stanislav Gross
succeeded Spidla as government leader, but Gross resigned in Apr., 2005,
dogged by charges of personal financial impropriety. He was succeeded
as prime minister by fellow Social Democrat Jiri Paroubek. In the June,
2006, elections the Civic Democrats won the largest share of the vote
and the most seats in parliament, but the Social Democrat–led coalition
secured half the seats. The Civic Democrats formed a three-party
coalition, and Mirek Topolánek became prime minister in August. In
October, however, the coalition lost a confidence vote, forcing the
president to open negotiations on formation of a new government. In
Jan., 2007, the president again approved a government headed by
Topolánek that involved the same three parties, and it narrowly won a
vote of confidence.
Klaus was elected to a second
term as president in Feb., 2008. In July, 2008, the Czech Republic
signed an agreement with the United States to base a radar system there.
Russia had previously strongly objected to such an arrangement, and
shortly after the signing there was a decrease in Russian oil supplies
to the Czech Republic that Russia attributed to technical problems
despite disbelief from the Czechs.
Source: www.factmonster.com
Source: www.factmonster.com
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