Prime Minister of Gagium
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Prime Minister of Gagium | |
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Premier ministre de la République gagienne | |
Style | The Honorable Her Excellency (diplomatic) |
Member of | Cabinet Council on Defense |
Seat | TBD |
Appointer | Gagian Assembly majority needed |
Term length | 4 years renewable once |
Constituting instrument | Gagian Constitution |
Formation | 28 July 1836 (First Republic) 30 July 1955 (under the Second Republic) |
The Prime Minister of Gagium is the head of government of the Gagian Republic.
Nomination
Authority, powers, and role
History
List of Prime Ministers
First Republic
Second Republic
Portrait | President (Birth–Death) |
Term | Party | Election(s) (Assembly) |
Notes | ||
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Valérian Dupont (1914–1993) |
5 June 1955 |
30 July 1959 |
Rally for Social Democracy | 1955 (TBDth) |
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4 years and 55 days | |||||||
Benoit Bouchard (1912–1989) |
30 July 1959 |
30 July 1963 |
Liberal Democratic Party | 1959 (TBDth) |
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4 years and 0 days | |||||||
Alain Dubos (1915–1992) |
30 July 1963 |
30 July 1971 |
Green Realist Party | 1963 (TBDth) 1967 (TBDth) |
A staunch progressive, Dubos' administration was characterized by the advent of the Gagian green movement. This led to limits on domestic oil production and the creation of the environmental ministry. The economic consequences of Dubos' green agenda coupled with the effects of the Drought of 1968-69 would lead to the rise of the Revolutionary Committee for Reform after the 1971 election. | ||
8 years and 0 days | |||||||
Ulysse Cohen (1909–1983) |
30 July 1971 |
23 August 1983 |
Revolutionary Committee for Reform | 1971 (TBDth) 1975 1979 May 1983 (TBDth) |
After taking office, Ulysse Cohen and the Revolutionary Committee ushered in unprecedented policies to expand Gagium's industrial base and decrease unemployment. Cohen's government eventually led state takeovers of several major companies, including the defense manufacturer Brasmant, and used military force to intimidate voters in later elections. Cohen's regime would collapse after the Third Great War resulted in the Invasion of Gagium and he was assassinated. | ||
12 years and 24 days | |||||||
Alaire Moulin (1922–1996) |
23 August 1983 |
27 August 1983 |
Revolutionary Committee for Reform | - (TBDth) |
The Revolutionary Committee-dominated Gagian Assembly overwhelmingly voted for Alaire Moulin as Prime Minister after the assassination of Cohen. On August 24th, he surrendered to the Third Coalition and yielded to demands for an immediate snap election. This would occur on the 27th of August. | ||
4 days | |||||||
Isaac Rochet (1908–1984) |
27 August 1983 |
4 September 1984 |
Liberal Democratic Party | August 1983 (TBDth) |
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1 year and 8 days | |||||||
TBD (TBD1–TBD2) |
4 September 1984 |
30 July 1987 |
Liberal Democratic Party | - (TBDth) |
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2 years and 329 days | |||||||
TBD (TBD1–TBD2) |
30 July 1987 |
30 July 1991 |
Liberal Democratic Party | 1987 (TBDth) |
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4 years and 0 days | |||||||
Paulin Beauvilliers (1939–2021) |
30 July 1991 |
26 July 2002 |
Liberal Democratic Party | 1991 (TBDth) 1995 (TBDth) 1999 (TBDth) |
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10 years and 361 days | |||||||
Rousel Leon (1947–) |
26 July 2002 |
30 July 2003 |
Liberal Democratic Party | - (TBDth) |
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1 year and 4 days | |||||||
Simon Lambert (1951–) |
30 July 2003 |
30 July 2007 |
Rally for Social Democracy | 2003 (TBDth) |
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4 years and 0 days | |||||||
Jacques Porcher (1940–2018) |
30 July 2007 |
25 May 2009 |
Rally for Social Democracy | 2007 (TBDth) |
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1 year and 299 days | |||||||
Lou Fresnel (1948–) |
25 May 2009 |
30 July 2011 |
Rally for Social Democracy | - (TBDth) |
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2 years and 66 days | |||||||
Jacob Chuquet (1956–) |
30 July 2011 |
30 July 2019 |
Gagian Liberties Party | 2011 (TBDth) 2015 (TBDth) |
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8 years and 0 days | |||||||
Céleste de Saint-Pierre (1979–) |
30 July 2019 |
Incumbent | Rally for Social Democracy | 2019 (TBDth) 2023 (TBDth) |
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5 years and 111 days |