Chairman of the Hanoverian Union: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 13:39, 25 October 2022
Chairman of the Hanoverian Union | |
---|---|
Executive Council of the Hanoverian Union | |
Style | Chairman |
Status | Chief administrative officer of the Hanoverian Union |
Seat | 11 Downing Street, London, England |
Appointer | President of the Hanoverian Union |
Term length | 5 years, renewable |
Constituting instrument | Brussels Agreement |
Formation | 6 December 1946 |
First holder | Herbert Morrison |
Website | huchairman.org |
The Chairman of the Hanoverian Union is the chief administrative officer of the Executive Council of the Hanoverian Union, the legislative body of the Hanoverian Union, a politico-economic union comprising the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. Formed in line with the organisation's founding in 1946, the chairman is the executive head of the organisation as a whole, tasked with the day-to-day governance of the organisation through its legislative body, known as the Executive Council. Since its foundation, the office of chairman has been rotated among the organisation's three member states every five years, with the office normally going to the deputy prime minister of the chosen country, with the current officeholder being David Gauke, the Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
Given that the office traditionally rotates between the organisastion's three member states every five years, there is therefore no fixed residence for the chairman, with the designated residence often depending on the country chosen for the chairmanship at any given moment, with the current chairman's residence being the 11 Downing Street in London, England.