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Hamilton is the current Guyanese Minister of Labour in Guyana. [3] Hamilton was sworn in as Minister under President Irfaan Ali cabinet. [4] He was appointed Minister in August 2020. Prior to his appointment as Minister, he was the Parliamentary Secretary under the Ministry of Health. [5] [6]
The party was established in 1992 as a breakaway from the Guyanese Action for Reform and Democracy, [1] holding its first meeting on 19 August. [2] It did not run in the October 1992 elections, instead advising its supporters to vote for the People's Progressive Party.
The Cabinet of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana is a principal component of the executive branch of the government of Guyana. Established by Article 106 of the Constitution of Guyana, the Cabinet consists of the President of Guyana, the Prime Minister, the Vice Presidents (if any additional Vice Presidents are appointed), and the Ministers appointed by the President.
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This article lists political parties in Guyana. Guyana has a two-party system , which means that there are two dominant political parties . The main schism is not of ideology, but ethnicity; the People's Progressive Party is supported primarily by Indo-Guyanese people, while the People's National Congress is supported primarily by Afro-Guyanese ...
Labour ministers of Guyana (1 P) P. Prime ministers of Guyana (10 P) T. Trade ministers of Guyana (1 P) W. ... This page was last edited on 21 March 2013, at 13:39 (UTC).
The BGLU was founded in 1919, emerging as a labour union amongst black dockworkers. Led by Hubert Critchlow. It soon expanded into a colony-wide labour movement. [2] BGLU was not the first trade union in the Caribbean, but was the first to be legally registered. [3] By 1928 the organization claimed to have 1,073 members, of whom 341 were women. [4]
The party was established in 1982, [1] In the 1985 general elections it received only 0.7% of the vote and failed to win a seat. [2] Following the elections, it joined the Patriotic Coalition for Democracy, an alliance of five parties calling for free and fair elections. [3]