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Council of Ministers of Lebanon

The Council of Ministers of Lebanon (Arabic: مجلس الوزراء اللبناني, romanizedMajlis al-wozarah al-Lubnanī) is the executive body of the Republic of Lebanon. Its president is the Prime Minister of Lebanon, and it is appointed by the President of Lebanon and the Prime Minister of Lebanon. The appointed government also has to pass a confidence vote in the Parliament of Lebanon. As stipulated in Article 95 of the Lebanese constitution,[2] there are two requirements for the council of ministers to be considered constitutional:

Council of Ministers of the Lebanese Republic
مجلس الوزراء
Overview
Established1926 (Constitution of the Republic of Lebanon)
StateLebanese Republic
LeaderPrime Minister of Lebanon
Appointed byPresident of Lebanon and Prime Minister of Lebanon
Ministries22[1]
Responsible toChamber of Deputies
HeadquartersGrand Serail
Websitehttp://www.pcm.gov.lb/arabic/index.aspx?pageid=5

1- It has to be composed of an equal number of Muslim and Christian ministers.

2- The different sects of Lebanon shall be represented in a just and equitable manner in the formation of the Cabinet.

The Council of Ministers is considered to be the "government" of Lebanon according to the Constitution.

History edit

The body was created on 23 May 1926, when the Constitution of the state of Greater Lebanon was promulgated. From the creation of the office in 1926 to the end of the Civil War, the Constitution made little mention of the roles and duties of the office, albeit for a mention of the President to "nominate one of the ministers as Prime Ministers". Following the end of the Lebanese Civil War and the ratification of the Ta'if Accord, the responsibilities of the Council of Ministers were significantly strengthened, codified and clearly listed in the Constitution. Notably, the accord shifted the executive power from the President to the Council.

Formation of a Government edit

The Council is formed by a Decree of the President of the Republic, which is countersigned by the Prime Minister. Within 30 days, the Chamber of Deputies must approve the Government through a vote of confidence, which requires a simple majority. By Article 64 of the Lebanese Constitution, it is the Prime Minister who assumes the negotiations with the Parliament for the formation of a government. By custom, the government is composed equally between Muslims and Christians - however, this is not a requirement specified in the Constitution.[3]

Resignation of the Cabinet edit

According to Article 69 of the Constitution,[4] the government is considered resigned when:

  • The Prime Minister resigns or dies.
  • It loses more than a third of its members, as prescribed in its original decree of formation.
  • When a new President takes office.
  • At the beginning of a new term of the Chamber of Deputies.
  • When the Chamber of Deputies has a vote of no confidence in the Cabinet, either by the initiative of the Cabinet or the Chamber.
  • The President of the Republic fires the Prime Minister.

Caretaker government edit

When the government is considered resigned (as per the conditions set above), or has not yet received a vote of confidence from the Chamber of Deputies, it can only operate "in the narrow sense of conducting the business".

In addition, the cabinet is a caretaker government when the term of the President of the Republic expires and the Parliament has not yet elected a new President. For example, this was the case for 2 years upon the expiration of President Michel Suleiman's term in 2014 up until the election of Michel Aoun on 31 October 2016, with Prime Minister Tammam Salam acting as its Head.

Responsibilities and powers edit

The council is generally tasked with overseeing daily affairs, and preparing bills for the House of Deputies to vote on. The individual ministers work on their own portfolios, and only need the signature of the President and the Prime Minister for decisions concerning their individual ministry. When decisions affect the entire government, a majority of the ministers are needed. For the government to consent on so-called "basic" issues (constitutional amendments, electoral laws, dissolving parliament, war and peace, intl. treaties, state of emergency, state budget, long-term development plans, appointing first-cadre state employees, redistricting, nationality laws, personal affairs law, dismissing ministers)[nb 1] a 2/3 majority of the ministers present is needed.

The following is a list of the powers of the Council of Ministers:

  • Forming bills for the legislature to vote on. It elaborates the public agenda, and takes the necessary decisions for the implementation of the bills adopted by the House of Deputies.
  • Acquiesce on the decision of the President to dissolve the Parliament.
  • Consent on the President's ratification of international treaties.
  • Approve the dismissal of a minister by the President.
  • Oversee all civil, military, and security administrations.
  • It is the power to which the Armed Forces are subjected (however, the President is the commander-in-chief and thus has the final say).

Powers in relation to the President edit

Prior to the Ta'if Accord, the role of Council was to give the President its "favourable advice" rather than a clear consensus/majority on the issues prescribed above.[5] Nevertheless, as the president is the sole person who can nominate/remove the ministers and the entire government, it is bound to be favorable to him or her. In addition, the Constitution is silent on the issue of retaliation - where if the President has the authority to fire the government and sign a decree it did not approve of - however this issue has never arisen since the Cabinet generally deferential to the President (or vice versa).

Meetings and quorum edit

The President of the Council of Ministers is the Prime Minister. He heads the meetings and calls ordinary meetings. Whenever the president attends, however, he chairs the meetings (but without voting on its decisions). In addition, the President can place any item he deems to be "urgent" on the agenda and order extraordinary sessions.[citation needed]

The quorum for a meeting is 2/3 of the ministers, and its decisions are taken by those present (voting by proxy is not allowed).[citation needed]

Secterian representation controversies edit

There has been several controversies relating to sectarian groups and the power to topple the government. For example, in 2006, Hezbollah began mass demonstrations as all 5 Shiite and 1 Christian from resigned from the 24 member cabinet (2 short of the 1/3 needed to bring down the government) of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora.[6] This meant that there was effectively no Shiite representation in the Cabinet and a Christian majority. Nevertheless, the government continued to function for another 2 years until incumbent President Emile Lahoud's term ended in 2008.[citation needed]

  1. ^ The "basic issues" must be specified in the decree of formation of the government to be considered basic issues.

September 2021 Cabinet edit

Lebanese Government of September 2021
Portfolio (Ministry) Minister Political affiliation Religious Affiliation
Prime Minister Shares (5/24)
Prime Minister Najib Mikati   Azm Movement Sunni
Minister of Economy and Trade Amin Salam   Azm Movement Sunni
Minister of Interior and Municipalities Bassam Mawlawi   Azm Movement Sunni
Minister of Public Health Firas Abiad   Future Movement Sunni
Minister of the Environment Nasser Yassine   Future Movement Sunni
President Michel Aoun and Strong Lebanon Bloc Shares (8/24)
Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdallah Bou Habib   Free Patriotic Movement Maronite
Minister of Justice Henry Khoury   Free Patriotic Movement Maronite
Minister of Tourism Walid Nassar   Free Patriotic Movement Maronite
Minister of Energy and Water Walid Fayyad   Free Patriotic Movement Greek Orthodox
Minister of Defense Maurice Sleem   Free Patriotic Movement Greek Orthodox
State Minister for Administrative Reforms Najla Riachi   Free Patriotic Movement Greek Catholic
Minister of Industry George Bouchikian   Tashnag Party Armenian Orthodox
Minister of Displaced Issam Charafeddine   Lebanese Democratic Party Druze
Amal Movement (3/24)
Minister of Finance Youssef Khalil   Amal Movement Shia
Minister of Agriculture Abbas Hajj Hassan   Amal Movement Shia
Minister of Culture Mohammad Mortada   Amal Movement Shia
Loyalty to Resistance Bloc (2/24)
Minister of Public Works Ali Hamiyeh   Hezbollah Shia
Minister of Labour Mustafa Bairam   Hezbollah Shia
National Coalition (2/24)
Minister of Telecommunications Johnny Korm   Marada Movement Maronite
Minister of Information Ziad Makary   Marada Movement Maronite
Others (4/24)
Deputy Prime Minister Saadeh Al Shami   Syrian Social Nationalist Party Greek Orthodox
Minister of Education and Higher Learning Abbas Halabi   Progressive Socialist Party Druze
Minister of Youth and Sport George Klass   Independent Greek Catholic
State Minister for Social Affairs Hector Hajjar   Independent Minorities

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "President Aoun and Premier Mikati signed the government formation decree". Lebanese Presidency. 10 September 2021. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  2. ^ "Lebanese Constitution" (PDF). Lebanese Presidency. 1 November 2022.
  3. ^ https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Lebanon_2004.pdf?lang=en[bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Lebanon_2004.pdf?lang=en[bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ http://www.concourt.am/armenian/legal_resources/world_constitutions/constit/lebanon/lebann-e.htm
  6. ^ "Hezbollah Threatens Protests to Topple Lebanese Government". The Washington Post.


  This article incorporates public domain material from the Library of Congress

council, ministers, lebanon, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, . This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Council of Ministers of Lebanon Arabic مجلس الوزراء اللبناني romanized Majlis al wozarah al Lubnani is the executive body of the Republic of Lebanon Its president is the Prime Minister of Lebanon and it is appointed by the President of Lebanon and the Prime Minister of Lebanon The appointed government also has to pass a confidence vote in the Parliament of Lebanon As stipulated in Article 95 of the Lebanese constitution 2 there are two requirements for the council of ministers to be considered constitutional Council of Ministers of the Lebanese Republicمجلس الوزراءOverviewEstablished1926 Constitution of the Republic of Lebanon StateLebanese RepublicLeaderPrime Minister of LebanonAppointed byPresident of Lebanon and Prime Minister of LebanonMinistries22 1 Responsible toChamber of DeputiesHeadquartersGrand SerailWebsitehttp www pcm gov lb arabic index aspx pageid 51 It has to be composed of an equal number of Muslim and Christian ministers 2 The different sects of Lebanon shall be represented in a just and equitable manner in the formation of the Cabinet The Council of Ministers is considered to be the government of Lebanon according to the Constitution Contents 1 History 2 Formation of a Government 2 1 Resignation of the Cabinet 2 2 Caretaker government 3 Responsibilities and powers 3 1 Powers in relation to the President 4 Meetings and quorum 4 1 Secterian representation controversies 5 September 2021 Cabinet 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory editThe body was created on 23 May 1926 when the Constitution of the state of Greater Lebanon was promulgated From the creation of the office in 1926 to the end of the Civil War the Constitution made little mention of the roles and duties of the office albeit for a mention of the President to nominate one of the ministers as Prime Ministers Following the end of the Lebanese Civil War and the ratification of the Ta if Accord the responsibilities of the Council of Ministers were significantly strengthened codified and clearly listed in the Constitution Notably the accord shifted the executive power from the President to the Council Formation of a Government editThe Council is formed by a Decree of the President of the Republic which is countersigned by the Prime Minister Within 30 days the Chamber of Deputies must approve the Government through a vote of confidence which requires a simple majority By Article 64 of the Lebanese Constitution it is the Prime Minister who assumes the negotiations with the Parliament for the formation of a government By custom the government is composed equally between Muslims and Christians however this is not a requirement specified in the Constitution 3 Resignation of the Cabinet edit According to Article 69 of the Constitution 4 the government is considered resigned when The Prime Minister resigns or dies It loses more than a third of its members as prescribed in its original decree of formation When a new President takes office At the beginning of a new term of the Chamber of Deputies When the Chamber of Deputies has a vote of no confidence in the Cabinet either by the initiative of the Cabinet or the Chamber The President of the Republic fires the Prime Minister Caretaker government edit When the government is considered resigned as per the conditions set above or has not yet received a vote of confidence from the Chamber of Deputies it can only operate in the narrow sense of conducting the business In addition the cabinet is a caretaker government when the term of the President of the Republic expires and the Parliament has not yet elected a new President For example this was the case for 2 years upon the expiration of President Michel Suleiman s term in 2014 up until the election of Michel Aoun on 31 October 2016 with Prime Minister Tammam Salam acting as its Head Responsibilities and powers editThe council is generally tasked with overseeing daily affairs and preparing bills for the House of Deputies to vote on The individual ministers work on their own portfolios and only need the signature of the President and the Prime Minister for decisions concerning their individual ministry When decisions affect the entire government a majority of the ministers are needed For the government to consent on so called basic issues constitutional amendments electoral laws dissolving parliament war and peace intl treaties state of emergency state budget long term development plans appointing first cadre state employees redistricting nationality laws personal affairs law dismissing ministers nb 1 a 2 3 majority of the ministers present is needed The following is a list of the powers of the Council of Ministers Forming bills for the legislature to vote on It elaborates the public agenda and takes the necessary decisions for the implementation of the bills adopted by the House of Deputies Acquiesce on the decision of the President to dissolve the Parliament Consent on the President s ratification of international treaties Approve the dismissal of a minister by the President Oversee all civil military and security administrations It is the power to which the Armed Forces are subjected however the President is the commander in chief and thus has the final say Powers in relation to the President edit Prior to the Ta if Accord the role of Council was to give the President its favourable advice rather than a clear consensus majority on the issues prescribed above 5 Nevertheless as the president is the sole person who can nominate remove the ministers and the entire government it is bound to be favorable to him or her In addition the Constitution is silent on the issue of retaliation where if the President has the authority to fire the government and sign a decree it did not approve of however this issue has never arisen since the Cabinet generally deferential to the President or vice versa Meetings and quorum editThe President of the Council of Ministers is the Prime Minister He heads the meetings and calls ordinary meetings Whenever the president attends however he chairs the meetings but without voting on its decisions In addition the President can place any item he deems to be urgent on the agenda and order extraordinary sessions citation needed The quorum for a meeting is 2 3 of the ministers and its decisions are taken by those present voting by proxy is not allowed citation needed Secterian representation controversies edit There has been several controversies relating to sectarian groups and the power to topple the government For example in 2006 Hezbollah began mass demonstrations as all 5 Shiite and 1 Christian from resigned from the 24 member cabinet 2 short of the 1 3 needed to bring down the government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora 6 This meant that there was effectively no Shiite representation in the Cabinet and a Christian majority Nevertheless the government continued to function for another 2 years until incumbent President Emile Lahoud s term ended in 2008 citation needed The basic issues must be specified in the decree of formation of the government to be considered basic issues September 2021 Cabinet editMain article Third Cabinet of Najib Mikati Lebanese Government of September 2021Portfolio Ministry Minister Political affiliation Religious AffiliationPrime Minister Shares 5 24 Prime Minister Najib Mikati Azm Movement SunniMinister of Economy and Trade Amin Salam Azm Movement SunniMinister of Interior and Municipalities Bassam Mawlawi Azm Movement SunniMinister of Public Health Firas Abiad Future Movement SunniMinister of the Environment Nasser Yassine Future Movement SunniPresident Michel Aoun and Strong Lebanon Bloc Shares 8 24 Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdallah Bou Habib Free Patriotic Movement MaroniteMinister of Justice Henry Khoury Free Patriotic Movement MaroniteMinister of Tourism Walid Nassar Free Patriotic Movement MaroniteMinister of Energy and Water Walid Fayyad Free Patriotic Movement Greek OrthodoxMinister of Defense Maurice Sleem Free Patriotic Movement Greek OrthodoxState Minister for Administrative Reforms Najla Riachi Free Patriotic Movement Greek CatholicMinister of Industry George Bouchikian Tashnag Party Armenian OrthodoxMinister of Displaced Issam Charafeddine Lebanese Democratic Party DruzeAmal Movement 3 24 Minister of Finance Youssef Khalil Amal Movement ShiaMinister of Agriculture Abbas Hajj Hassan Amal Movement ShiaMinister of Culture Mohammad Mortada Amal Movement ShiaLoyalty to Resistance Bloc 2 24 Minister of Public Works Ali Hamiyeh Hezbollah ShiaMinister of Labour Mustafa Bairam Hezbollah ShiaNational Coalition 2 24 Minister of Telecommunications Johnny Korm Marada Movement MaroniteMinister of Information Ziad Makary Marada Movement MaroniteOthers 4 24 Deputy Prime Minister Saadeh Al Shami Syrian Social Nationalist Party Greek OrthodoxMinister of Education and Higher Learning Abbas Halabi Progressive Socialist Party DruzeMinister of Youth and Sport George Klass Independent Greek CatholicState Minister for Social Affairs Hector Hajjar Independent MinoritiesSee also editList of Cabinets of LebanonReferences edit President Aoun and Premier Mikati signed the government formation decree Lebanese Presidency 10 September 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2022 Lebanese Constitution PDF Lebanese Presidency 1 November 2022 https www constituteproject org constitution Lebanon 2004 pdf lang en bare URL PDF https www constituteproject org constitution Lebanon 2004 pdf lang en bare URL PDF http www concourt am armenian legal resources world constitutions constit lebanon lebann e htm Hezbollah Threatens Protests to Topple Lebanese Government The Washington Post nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from the Library of Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Council of Ministers of Lebanon amp oldid 1183819162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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