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Cabinet meetings are chaired by the prime minister, and a senior public servant is present to write the minutes and record decisions. Since 1942, every member of the Cabinet has been a member of the Australian Labor Party, the Liberal Party of Australia, or the National Party of Australia.
Until 1956 all members of the ministry were members of the cabinet. The growth of the ministry in the 1940s and 1950s made this increasingly impractical, and in 1956 Robert Menzies created a two-tier ministry, with only senior ministers holding cabinet rank, also known within parliament as the front bench .
The National Cabinet is the primary Australian intergovernmental decision-making forum composed of the prime minister and state and territory premiers and chief ministers of Australia’s six states and two mainland territories.
Pages in category "Members of the Cabinet of Australia" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 355 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
This is a list of the offices of heads of state, heads of government, cabinet, and legislature, of sovereign states. Date of Origin refers to most recent fundamental change in form of government, for example independence, change from absolute monarchy to constitutional monarchy, revolution, new constitution.
Each portfolio is led by one or more government ministers who are members of the federal parliament, appointed by the governor-general on the advice of the prime minister. [1] As of December 2023, there are 1,334 government entities reportable to the Australian Government Organisations Register. This includes: [2] [3]
Boko cabinet: 1 November 2024 Brazil: Second cabinet of Lula da Silva: 1 January 2023 [17] Brunei: Council of Cabinet Ministers: 7 June 2022 [18] Bulgaria: Denkov-Gabriel Government: 6 June 2023 [19] Burkina Faso: Cabinet of Kyélem de Tambèla: 24 January 2022 Burundi: Ndayishimiye cabinet: 28 June 2020 [20] Cape Verde: Cabinet of Cape Verde ...
The prime minister of Australia is the leader of the Australian Government and the Cabinet of Australia, with the support of the majority of the House of Representatives. [1] [2] Thirty-one people (thirty men and one woman) have served in the position since the office was created in 1901. [3]