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Office Name Term President: José P. Laurel: 1943–1945 Minister of Agriculture and Commerce: Rafael Alunan: 1943–1945 Minister of Health, Labor and Public Instructions: Emiliano Tría Tirona: 1943–1945 Minister of Finance: Antonio de las Alas: 1943–1945 Minister of Foreign Affairs: Claro M. Recto: 1943–1945 Minister of Justice ...
The Department of Justice (Filipino: Kagawaran ng Katarungan, abbreviated as DOJ) is under the executive department of the Philippine government responsible for upholding the rule of law in the Philippines. It is the government's principal law agency, serving as its legal counsel and prosecution arm. [2]
Article 7, Section 16 of the Constitution of the Philippines says that the President . shall nominate and, with the consent of the Commission on Appointments, appoint the heads of the executive departments, ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, or officers of the armed forces from the rank of colonel or naval captain, and other officers whose appointments are vested in him in this ...
Kwabena O. Darko-Mensah (Deputy minister) August 2018– (nominated) Ministers of State Office(s) Officeholder Term Minister of State at the Office of the President in charge of Public Procurement Sarah Adwoa Safo [38] [39] Note 2: April 4, 2017 – Minister of State at the Ministry of Education in charge of Tertiary Education Kwesi Yankah ...
Rodrigo Duterte assumed office as President of the Philippines on June 30, 2016, and his term ended on June 30, 2022. On May 31, 2016, a few weeks before his presidential inauguration, Duterte named his Cabinet members, [8] which comprised a diverse selection of former military generals, childhood friends, classmates, and leftists. [9]
The government of the Philippines (Filipino: Pamahalaan ng Pilipinas) has three interdependent branches: the legislative, executive, and judicial branches.The Philippines is governed as a unitary state under a presidential representative and democratic constitutional republic in which the president functions as both the head of state and the head of government of the country within a pluriform ...
The order of precedence in the Philippines is the protocol used in ranking government officials and other personages in the Philippines. [1] Purely ceremonial in nature, it has no legal standing, and does not reflect the presidential line of succession nor the equal status of the three branches of government established in the 1987 Constitution.
On February 22, 1986, Marcos revived the Council of State through Executive Order No. 1093 and, with the President as chairman, designated the following as members: the Vice-President as Vice Chairman, and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, the Prime Minister, the Deputy Prime Minister, the Minister of Finance, the Minister of Foreign ...