President of Sainte-Chloé: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 57: | Line 57: | ||
===United Provinces (1945-1954)=== | ===United Provinces (1945-1954)=== | ||
{{legend2|#DDDDDD|{{wp|Independent (politics)|Independent}}|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}} | {{legend2|#DDDDDD|{{wp|Independent (politics)|Independent}}|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}}<br> | ||
{{legend2|#00FFFF|[[Democratic Party of Sainte-Chloé|Democratic Party (PD)]]|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}} | {{legend2|#00FFFF|[[Democratic Party of Sainte-Chloé|Democratic Party (PD)]]|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}} | ||
{|class="wikitable" width="100%" | {|class="wikitable" width="100%" |
Revision as of 05:28, 21 July 2021
President of the Republic of Sainte-Chloé | |
---|---|
Executive Office of the President | |
Style | His Excellency |
Status | Head of State |
Abbreviation | PDSC |
Member of | Cabinet of Sainte-Chloé |
Residence | Azure Palace |
Seat | Port de la Sainte |
Term length | Six Years, renewable once |
Constituting instrument | Constitution of Sainte-Chloé |
Formation | Feburary 14th, 1954 |
First holder | Camille Pétain |
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
The President of the Republic of Sainte-Chloé (Alternatively: President of Sainte-Chloé) is the head of state and head of executive of the Republic of Sainte-Chloé and commander-chief of the Armed Forces of Sainte-Chloé. The President is popularly elected and may serve up to two six-year terms, and is considered the highest office in the Republic.
List of Presidents and Heads of State
Community of Nations Mandate (1935-1945)
No | Picture | Name | Term | Tenure | Mandate and notes | Affiliation | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- | Pierre Voloix (1893-1968) |
- | 21 April 1935 |
3 May 1945 |
Appointment by the Community of Nations Trusteeship Committee | Independent |
United Provinces (1945-1954)
Independent
Democratic Party (PD)
No | Picture | Name | Term | Tenure | Prime Minister | Notes | Affiliation | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lionel Heagan (1886-1976) |
1 | 4 May 1945 |
3 May 1949 |
Pierre Voloix (PD) | From Imagua and the Assimas. Continued serving even after Imagua left the UP, before retiring in 1949. | Independent | |
2 | Pierre Voloix (1893-1968) |
1 | 4 May 1949 |
3 May 1953 |
Dominique Viollette (PD) | Under Rivière's lead, the constitution is rewritten and the republic of Sainte-Chloé replaces the United Provinces, ending Voloix's Presidency. | Democratic Party | |
2 | 4 May 1953 |
13 Feburary 1954 |
Raymond Rivière (PCT) |
Republic of Sainte-Chloé (1954-present)
Catholic Labour Party (PCT)
Social Democratic Party (PSD)
Independent
No | Picture | Name | Term | Tenure | Premier | Notes | Affiliation | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Camille Pétain (1906-1977) |
1 | 14 Feburary 1954 |
13 Feburary 1960 |
Raymond Rivière (PCT) | The very end of his term saw the Sugar Crash and the fall of Rivière, leading to the snap elections of 1965. | Catholic Labour Party | |
2 | 14 Feburary 1960 |
13 Feburary 1966 |
Raymond Rivière (PCT) Claude Bourgent (PSD) | |||||
2 | File:Milton Cato.png | Martin Célestin (?-?) |
1 | 14 Feburary 1966 |
13 Feburary 1972 |
Claude Bourgent (PSD) François Laurent (PCT) |
Social Democratic Party | |
3 | Pierre Leroy (1912-1981) |
1 | 14 Feburary 1972 |
13 Feburary 1978 |
François Laurent (PCT) Alexandre du Ponte (PSD) |
Catholic Labour Party | ||
4 | File:Leslie Manigat, 16 juin 1988.png | Henri Bordin (?-?) |
1 | 14 Feburary 1978 |
13 Feburary 1984 |
Alexandre du Ponte (PSD) Antoine Remont (PSD) Dominique Monteclare (PCT) |
The global financial crisis of 1980 saw the downfall of the PSD government in 1981, leading to a long cohabitation period of nearly 3 years. | Social Democratic Party |
5 | Philippe Leclercq (?-?) |
1 | 14 Feburary 1984 |
13 Feburary 1990 |
Dominique Monteclare (PCT) Jean-Baptiste Florent (PCT) |
Catholic Labour Party | ||
2 | 14 Feburary 1990 |
13 Feburary 1996 |
Jean-Baptiste Florent (PCT) | |||||
6 | Jean-Claude Bennet (1956-) |
1 | 14 Feburary 1996 |
13 Feburary 2002 |
Jean-Baptiste Florent (PCT) Jean-Luc Morin (PSD) |
Independent | ||
7 | René Gagné (?-) |
1 | 14 Feburary 2002 |
13 Feburary 2008 |
Jean-Luc Morin (PSD) Gladys Dubous (PSD) |
Social Democratic Party | ||
8 | Jaques Durand (?-) |
1 | 14 Feburary 2008 |
13 Feburary 2014 |
Gladys Dubous (PSD) Jean-Baptiste Florent (PCT) Stephanie Conille (PCT) Bernard Blanc (PCT) |
Catholic Labour Party | ||
2 | 14 Feburary 2014 |
13 Feburary 2020 |
Bernard Blanc (PCT) | |||||
9 | Michel Thiele (1972-) |
1 | 14 Feburary 2020 |
Incumbent | Henri Montas (PSD) Genevieve Chevallier (PCT) |
Natural disasters and political fallout led to him dissovling the Parliament and calling snap elections in 2021, allowing the PCT to come back into power. | Catholic Labour Party |