fbpx
Wikipedia

Vice President of Venezuela

The vice president of Venezuela (Spanish: Vicepresidente de Venezuela), officially known as the Executive Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (Spanish: Vicepresidente Ejecutivo de la República Bolivariana de Venezuela), is the second highest political position in the government of Venezuela. The vice president is the direct collaborator of the Venezuelan president according to the Constitution. The office of vice president appeared in the Constitution of 1830 until the Constitution of 1858, and once again in the Constitution of 1999. However, in its current (1999) incarnation, the office is more akin to a prime minister in systems as those of France and South Korea.

Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
Vicepresidente Ejecutivo de la República Bolivariana de Venezuela
Logo of the Vicepresidency of Venezuela
Incumbent
Delcy Rodríguez
since June 18, 2018
ResidenceLa Viñeta
Term lengthNo fixed term
At the President's pleasure
Inaugural holderDiego Bautista Urbaneja
Formation1830
WebsiteVicepresidencia de la República

Since June 14, 2018, Delcy Rodríguez of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela has been vice president, serving with President Nicolás Maduro.[1]

Office of the executive vice president edit

Functions and duties edit

According to the Constitution of 1999, the duties of the executive vice president are

  1. To collaborate with the president of the Republic to direct the actions of the Government.
  2. To coordinate the Public National Administration in accordance with the instructions of the president of the Republic.
  3. To propose the appointment and the removal of the ministers to the president of the Republic.
  4. To preside over the Cabinet if the president is absent or with authorization in advance from the president.
  5. To coordinate the relations of the National Executive with the National Assembly.
  6. To preside at the Federal Council of Government.
  7. To name and to remove, in accordance with the law, the officials or national officials whose designation is not attributed to another authority.
  8. To substitute for the president of the Republic on temporary and absolute absences.
  9. To exercise the duties delegated to him by the president of the Republic.

Appointment and removal edit

The executive vice president is appointed and removed by the president. The vice president can also be removed with more than two-thirds of the votes in National Assembly. If the National Assembly removes three vice presidents from office during a six-year presidential term, the president is authorized to dissolve the Parliament.

Presidential succession edit

The executive vice president is the first in line to the succession of the president of Venezuela, when the president is unable to fulfill the duties of office in the exceptional cases established in the Article 233 and 234 of the National Constitution.

Former vice presidents Andrés Navarte, Carlos Soublette, Diosdado Cabello (in April 2002) and Nicolás Maduro (in 2012–2013) were all once acting presidents of Venezuela. Soublette and Maduro were also later elected as president.

List of vice presidents of Venezuela edit

State of Venezuela (1830–1864) edit

Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in office

Political party
Notes President
  Diego Bautista Urbaneja
(1782–1856)
1830 1833 Interim  
José Antonio Páez
(1830–1835)
Conservative Party
  Andrés Narvarte
(1781–1853)
1830 1835 Indirect elections
Conservative Party  
José María Vargas
(1835)
Vacancy under José María Carreño (1835)
  Andrés Narvarte
(1781–1853)
1835 1836 Indirect elections  
José María Vargas
(1835–1836)
Conservative Party
  José María Carreño
(1792–1849)
1836 1837 Indirect elections  
Andrés Narvarte
(1836–1837)
Conservative Party
  Diego Bautista Urbaneja
(1782–1856)
1837 Indirect elections  
José María Carreño
(1837)
Conservative Party
Vacancy under Carlos Soublette (1837–1839)
  Carlos Soublette
(1789–1870)
1839 1841 Indirect elections  
José Antonio Páez
(1839–1843)
Conservative Party
  Santos Michelena
(1797–1848)
1841 1845 Indirect elections
Conservative Party  
Carlos Soublette
(1843–1847)
  Diego Bautista Urbaneja
(1782–1856)
1845 1847 Indirect elections
Conservative Party  
José Tadeo Monagas
(1847–1851)
  Antonio Leocadio Guzmán
(1801–1884)
1847 1851 Indirect elections
Liberal Party  
José Gregorio Monagas
(1851–1855)
  Joaquín Herrera
(1784–1868)
1851 1855 Interim
Liberal Party
Vacancy under José Tadeo Monagas (1855–1858)
  Manuel Felipe de Tovar
(1803–1866)
1858 1859 Interim  
Julián Castro
(1858–1859)
Liberal Party  
Pedro Gual
(1859)
Vacancy under Manuel Felipe de Tovar (1859–1860)
  Pedro Gual Escandón
(1783–1862)
1860 1861 Interim  
Manuel de Tovar
(1859–1861)
Liberal Party
Vacancy under Pedro Gual Escandón (1861)
Vacancy under José Antonio Páez (1861–1863)
  Antonio Leocadio Guzmán
(1801–1884)
1863 1868 Indirect elections  
Juan Crisóstomo Falcón
(1863—1868)
Liberal Party

Fifth Republic (1999–present) edit

Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term in office

Political party
Notes President
  Isaías Rodríguez
(born 1942)
29 January 2000 24 December 2000 Directly designated  
Hugo Chávez
(1999–2002)
Fifth Republic Movement
  Adina Bastidas
(born 1943)
24 December 2000 13 January 2002 Directly designated
Independent[2]
  Diosdado Cabello
(born 1963)
13 January 2002 12 April 2002 Directly designated
Fifth Republic Movement
Vacancy under Pedro Carmona (2002)
Vacancy under Diosdado Cabello (2002)
  Diosdado Cabello
(born 1963)
14 April 2002 28 April 2002 Directly designated  
Hugo Chávez
(2002–2013)
Fifth Republic Movement
  José Vicente Rangel
(1929–2020)
28 April 2002 3 January 2007 Directly designated
Fifth Republic Movement
  Jorge Rodríguez
(born 1965)
3 January 2007 4 January 2008 Directly designated
Fifth Republic Movement
  Ramón Carrizales
(born 1952)
4 January 2008 26 January 2010 Directly designated
Fifth Republic Movement
United Socialist Party
  Elías Jaua
(born 1969)
26 January 2010 13 October 2012 Directly designated
United Socialist Party
  Nicolás Maduro
(born 1962)
13 October 2012 8 March 2013 Directly designated
United Socialist Party
  Jorge Arreaza
(born 1973)
8 March 2013 6 January 2016 Directly designated  
Nicolás Maduro
(2013–)
United Socialist Party
  Aristóbulo Istúriz
(1946–2021)
6 January 2016 4 January 2017 Directly designated
United Socialist Party
  Tareck El Aissami
(born 1974)
4 January 2017 14 June 2018 Directly designated
United Socialist Party
  Delcy Rodríguez
(born 1969)
14 June 2018 Incumbent Directly designated
United Socialist Party

See also edit

References edit

Sources
  • Vicepresidency of the Republic (in Spanish)
Citations
  1. ^ "¡Entérate! Nicolás Maduro anuncia cambio de gabinete vía Twitter". La Patilla (in European Spanish). 2018-06-14. Retrieved 2018-06-15.
  2. ^ "Adina Bastidas: "Yo asumo mi responsabilidad en el tema del control de cambio"". Aporrea.org (in Spanish). 13 June 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2016.

vice, president, venezuela, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, spanish, december, 2014, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, spanish, article, machine, translatio. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish December 2014 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Vicepresidente de Venezuela see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Vicepresidente de Venezuela to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The vice president of Venezuela Spanish Vicepresidente de Venezuela officially known as the Executive Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Spanish Vicepresidente Ejecutivo de la Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela is the second highest political position in the government of Venezuela The vice president is the direct collaborator of the Venezuelan president according to the Constitution The office of vice president appeared in the Constitution of 1830 until the Constitution of 1858 and once again in the Constitution of 1999 However in its current 1999 incarnation the office is more akin to a prime minister in systems as those of France and South Korea Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of VenezuelaVicepresidente Ejecutivo de la Republica Bolivariana de VenezuelaLogo of the Vicepresidency of VenezuelaIncumbentDelcy Rodriguezsince June 18 2018ResidenceLa VinetaTerm lengthNo fixed termAt the President s pleasureInaugural holderDiego Bautista UrbanejaFormation1830WebsiteVicepresidencia de la RepublicaSince June 14 2018 Delcy Rodriguez of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela has been vice president serving with President Nicolas Maduro 1 Contents 1 Office of the executive vice president 1 1 Functions and duties 1 2 Appointment and removal 1 3 Presidential succession 2 List of vice presidents of Venezuela 2 1 State of Venezuela 1830 1864 2 2 Fifth Republic 1999 present 3 See also 4 ReferencesOffice of the executive vice president editFunctions and duties edit According to the Constitution of 1999 the duties of the executive vice president are To collaborate with the president of the Republic to direct the actions of the Government To coordinate the Public National Administration in accordance with the instructions of the president of the Republic To propose the appointment and the removal of the ministers to the president of the Republic To preside over the Cabinet if the president is absent or with authorization in advance from the president To coordinate the relations of the National Executive with the National Assembly To preside at the Federal Council of Government To name and to remove in accordance with the law the officials or national officials whose designation is not attributed to another authority To substitute for the president of the Republic on temporary and absolute absences To exercise the duties delegated to him by the president of the Republic Appointment and removal edit The executive vice president is appointed and removed by the president The vice president can also be removed with more than two thirds of the votes in National Assembly If the National Assembly removes three vice presidents from office during a six year presidential term the president is authorized to dissolve the Parliament Presidential succession edit The executive vice president is the first in line to the succession of the president of Venezuela when the president is unable to fulfill the duties of office in the exceptional cases established in the Article 233 and 234 of the National Constitution Former vice presidents Andres Navarte Carlos Soublette Diosdado Cabello in April 2002 and Nicolas Maduro in 2012 2013 were all once acting presidents of Venezuela Soublette and Maduro were also later elected as president List of vice presidents of Venezuela editState of Venezuela 1830 1864 edit Portrait Name Birth Death Term in office Political party Notes President nbsp Diego Bautista Urbaneja 1782 1856 1830 1833 Interim nbsp Jose Antonio Paez 1830 1835 Conservative Party nbsp Andres Narvarte 1781 1853 1830 1835 Indirect electionsConservative Party nbsp Jose Maria Vargas 1835 Vacancy under Jose Maria Carreno 1835 nbsp Andres Narvarte 1781 1853 1835 1836 Indirect elections nbsp Jose Maria Vargas 1835 1836 Conservative Party nbsp Jose Maria Carreno 1792 1849 1836 1837 Indirect elections nbsp Andres Narvarte 1836 1837 Conservative Party nbsp Diego Bautista Urbaneja 1782 1856 1837 Indirect elections nbsp Jose Maria Carreno 1837 Conservative PartyVacancy under Carlos Soublette 1837 1839 nbsp Carlos Soublette 1789 1870 1839 1841 Indirect elections nbsp Jose Antonio Paez 1839 1843 Conservative Party nbsp Santos Michelena 1797 1848 1841 1845 Indirect electionsConservative Party nbsp Carlos Soublette 1843 1847 nbsp Diego Bautista Urbaneja 1782 1856 1845 1847 Indirect electionsConservative Party nbsp Jose Tadeo Monagas 1847 1851 nbsp Antonio Leocadio Guzman 1801 1884 1847 1851 Indirect electionsLiberal Party nbsp Jose Gregorio Monagas 1851 1855 nbsp Joaquin Herrera 1784 1868 1851 1855 InterimLiberal PartyVacancy under Jose Tadeo Monagas 1855 1858 nbsp Manuel Felipe de Tovar 1803 1866 1858 1859 Interim nbsp Julian Castro 1858 1859 Liberal Party nbsp Pedro Gual 1859 Vacancy under Manuel Felipe de Tovar 1859 1860 nbsp Pedro Gual Escandon 1783 1862 1860 1861 Interim nbsp Manuel de Tovar 1859 1861 Liberal PartyVacancy under Pedro Gual Escandon 1861 Vacancy under Jose Antonio Paez 1861 1863 nbsp Antonio Leocadio Guzman 1801 1884 1863 1868 Indirect elections nbsp Juan Crisostomo Falcon 1863 1868 Liberal PartyFifth Republic 1999 present edit Portrait Name Birth Death Term in office Political party Notes President nbsp Isaias Rodriguez born 1942 29 January 2000 24 December 2000 Directly designated nbsp Hugo Chavez 1999 2002 Fifth Republic Movement nbsp Adina Bastidas born 1943 24 December 2000 13 January 2002 Directly designatedIndependent 2 nbsp Diosdado Cabello born 1963 13 January 2002 12 April 2002 Directly designatedFifth Republic MovementVacancy under Pedro Carmona 2002 Vacancy under Diosdado Cabello 2002 nbsp Diosdado Cabello born 1963 14 April 2002 28 April 2002 Directly designated nbsp Hugo Chavez 2002 2013 Fifth Republic Movement nbsp Jose Vicente Rangel 1929 2020 28 April 2002 3 January 2007 Directly designatedFifth Republic Movement nbsp Jorge Rodriguez born 1965 3 January 2007 4 January 2008 Directly designatedFifth Republic Movement nbsp Ramon Carrizales born 1952 4 January 2008 26 January 2010 Directly designatedFifth Republic MovementUnited Socialist Party nbsp Elias Jaua born 1969 26 January 2010 13 October 2012 Directly designatedUnited Socialist Party nbsp Nicolas Maduro born 1962 13 October 2012 8 March 2013 Directly designatedUnited Socialist Party nbsp Jorge Arreaza born 1973 8 March 2013 6 January 2016 Directly designated nbsp Nicolas Maduro 2013 United Socialist Party nbsp Aristobulo Isturiz 1946 2021 6 January 2016 4 January 2017 Directly designatedUnited Socialist Party nbsp Tareck El Aissami born 1974 4 January 2017 14 June 2018 Directly designatedUnited Socialist Party nbsp Delcy Rodriguez born 1969 14 June 2018 Incumbent Directly designatedUnited Socialist PartySee also editList of presidents of Venezuela List of current vice presidentsReferences editSourcesVicepresidency of the Republic in Spanish Citations Enterate Nicolas Maduro anuncia cambio de gabinete via Twitter La Patilla in European Spanish 2018 06 14 Retrieved 2018 06 15 Adina Bastidas Yo asumo mi responsabilidad en el tema del control de cambio Aporrea org in Spanish 13 June 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vice President of Venezuela amp oldid 1201370093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.