Cabinet of Caldia: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 21: Line 21:
|-
|-
| [[Taoiseach of Caldia|Taoiseach]]
| [[Taoiseach of Caldia|Taoiseach]]
||[[Stiofán Mac Suibhne]]||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||[[Stiofán Mac Suibhne]]||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Foreign Affairs<br>Tánaiste
| Minister of Finance and State Programming<br>Tánaiste
||[[Séamus Ó Faoláin]]||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Pádraigín Níc Aodhagain||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs
| Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs
||Áine Níc Dáire||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Áine Níc Dáire||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
|rowspan=2|Minister of Children and Social Inclusion
| Minister of Culture and Social Inclusion
|Colmán Ó Deá
||Désirée Celice|||16 August 2022|||Incumbent
|27 February 2021
|2 June 2021
|-
|Désirée Celice
|2 June 2021
|Incumbent
|-
|rowspan=2|Minister of Culture
|Séarlas Mac Conmheadha
|27 February 2019
|1 June 2021
|-
|Colmán Ó Deá
|2 June 2021
|Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Defence  
| Minister of Defence  
||Dòmhnall Mac Dhòmhnaill||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Dòmhnall Mac Dhòmhnaill||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of EC Affairs
| Minister of EC Affairs
||Máirín Ní Ríain||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Beanon Ó Síoráin||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Education  
| Minister of Education  
|Gráinne Ní Cheanndubháin||27 February 2019||Incumbent
|Gráinne Ní Cheanndubháin||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Energy<br> Minister of Petroleum
| Minister of the Environment and Climate
||Seán Mac Cearbhaill||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Ríona Ní Scolaidhe||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of the Environment and Climate
| Minister of Foreign Affairs
||Micheál Wei||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Shirn Amanpour||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Finance<br>Minister of Pensions and Welfare
| Minister of Health and Family Services
||Pádraigín Níc Aodhagain||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Dr. Iseabail Nic Uilliam||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Health
| Minister of Immigration and International Relief
||Dr. Iseabail Nic Uilliam||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Peader Iho||16 August 2022||Incumbent||
|-
|-
| Minister of the Interior
| Minister of the Interior
||Murchadh Ó  Dochartaigh||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Faolan Mac Aodhagáin ⁊ Mac Con Mhaighe||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
|rowspan=2|Minister of International Investment and Cooperation
| Minister of International Investment and Cooperation
|Siobhan Fitzwarren
||Peader Iho||16 August 2022||Incumbent||
|27 February 2021
|1 June 2021
|-
|-
|Shirn Amanpour
| Minister of Justice and Equality
|2 June 2021
||Deirbhile Leamhnach||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|Incumbent
|-
|rowspan=2|Minister of Immigration and International Relief
|Shirn Amanpour
|27 February 2021
|2 June 2021
|-
|Peader Iho
|2 June 2021
|Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Labour
| Minister of Labour
||Gearóid Mac Mhaighstir ||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Eithne Ní Bhraonáin||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Justice and Equality
| Minister of National Security
||Deirbhile Leamhnach||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Aicher Ó Cahan||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of National Security
| Minister of Petroleum and Energy
||Fionnbharr Ó Madáin||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Seán Mac Cearbhaill||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|-
| Minister of Transport and Communication
| Minister of Transport and Communication
||Mairéad Mulherin||27 February 2019||Incumbent
||Colmán Ó Deá||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|-
|rowspan=2|Minister of Urban Development and Housing<br>Minister of Urban Affairs and Municipal Relations
|Aliyu Ruma
|27 February 2019
|24 May 2021
|-
|-
|Isibéal Mneria
| Minister of Urban Affairs and Development
|2 June 2021
||Isibéal Mneria||16 August 2022||Incumbent
|Incumbent
|-
|-
|}
|}

Revision as of 18:09, 29 July 2023

The Cabinet of the Caldia is the collective decision-making body of His Majesty's Government of the Kingdom of Caldia, composed of the taoiseach, tánaiste, and some 24 cabinet ministers, the most senior of the government ministers.

Meetings of the Cabinet

The cabinet meets every Monday at 13:00 EST. Meetings traditionally last two hours, with a fifteen minute break at the halfway mark. Emergency meetings call be called by the taoiseach at his or her discretion. The full cabinet, including both voting and non-voting ministers, attends the regular meetings. Special sessions of the cabinet can be called at the discretion of the taoiseach, with various ministers being excluded. For the cabinet to approve a resolution, all voting ministers must be present.

Since the relocation of the Taoiseach's Office to Ráitherialtais in 1976, the cabinet has met in the T Bloc, the building which housed the Executive Bureau and the Ministry of Justice and Equality. However, following the 23 August Attacks and the destruction of the T Bloc and a number of other government buildings in the district, the cabinet has held its regular meetings at Loveland House. The Executive Bureau was also relocated to Loveland House. Previously, only emergency cabinet sessions called late at night would be held at Loveland.

Parliamentary accountability

All voting members of the cabinet must come from the Comhthionól Náisiúnta, a rule which has been in effect since the passage of the Instrument for Governance Act of 1965. Before this, cabinet ministers could come from the Seanad Glítteann or from outside of the Tionól.

Cabinet ministers must be appointed by the Comhthionól when it is in session. If the legislature is in recess, they can be appointed by the taoiseach without the legislature's consent. This is the case after a general election when the newly elected or newly re-elected taoiseach appoints his or her cabinet. When the legislature is in session, the taoiseach nominates a minister who must then be approved by the relevant Comhthionól committee before the entire house can vote on the nomination. A simple majority vote is needed for confirmation.

Current cabinet

Cabinet ministers

Portfolio Minister Took office Left office
Taoiseach Stiofán Mac Suibhne 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Finance and State Programming
Tánaiste
Pádraigín Níc Aodhagain 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Áine Níc Dáire 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Culture and Social Inclusion Désirée Celice 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Defence Dòmhnall Mac Dhòmhnaill 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of EC Affairs Beanon Ó Síoráin 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Education Gráinne Ní Cheanndubháin 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of the Environment and Climate Ríona Ní Scolaidhe 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Foreign Affairs Shirn Amanpour 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Health and Family Services Dr. Iseabail Nic Uilliam 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Immigration and International Relief Peader Iho 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of the Interior Faolan Mac Aodhagáin ⁊ Mac Con Mhaighe 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of International Investment and Cooperation Peader Iho 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Justice and Equality Deirbhile Leamhnach 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Labour Eithne Ní Bhraonáin 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of National Security Aicher Ó Cahan 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Petroleum and Energy Seán Mac Cearbhaill 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Transport and Communication Colmán Ó Deá 16 August 2022 Incumbent
Minister of Urban Affairs and Development Isibéal Mneria 16 August 2022 Incumbent

Past cabinets

  • First Mac Coinneach Cabinet (1969-1972)
  • Second Mac Coinneach Cabinet (1972-1977)
  • Ó Muilleoir Cabinet (1977-1982)
  • First Flowers Cabinet (1982-1987)
  • Second Flowers Cabinet (1987-1992)
  • First Nic Uilliam Cabinet (1992-1997)
  • Second Nic Uilliam Cabinet (1997-2002)
  • Ó Faoláin Cabinet (2002)
  • Kelley Cabinet (2002-2007)
  • First Walker Cabinet (2007-2012)
  • Second Walker Cabinet (2012-2017)
  • O'Reilly Cabinet (2017-2018)
  • Casarnach Cabinet (2018-2019)
  • Dumfries Cabinet (2019)