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Leader of the Opposition (Fiji)

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Leader of the Opposition
File:Social-Democratic-Liberal-Party.png
Logo of the largest opposition party
Incumbent
Ro Teimumu Kepa
since 07 October 2016
Term lengthWhile leader of the largest political party not in government

The post of Leader of the Opposition is a political office common in countries that are part of the Commonwealth of Nations. It did not originate in Fiji but has a long tradition; in British constitutional theory, the Leader of the Opposition must pose a formal alternative to the government, ready to form a government himself should the Prime Minister lose the confidence of the Parliament.

Description of the office

The Leader of the Opposition is chosen by a vote of all members of Parliament who declare that they do not support the government. But before the adoption of the 2013 Constitution, the Leader of the Opposition was formally appointed by the President. The appointment was not at the president's personal discretion, however, as he was required by the Constitution to appoint the person most acceptable to the majority of the Opposition (defined as members of the House of Representatives who belong to political parties not represented in the Cabinet). In theory, that meant the parliamentary leader of the largest Opposition party. In practice, the person most eligible could decline the office, as was the case between 2001 and 2004, when Mahendra Chaudhry, whose Labour Party held 28 of the 30 Opposition seats in the House of Representatives, adamantly refused to accept the position of Leader of the Opposition, insisting that he and his party wanted representation in the Cabinet instead. Until he reversed his position late in 2004 (following the collapse of negotiations with Prime Minister Qarase), this forced the President to appoint Mick Beddoes, the sole parliamentary representative of the United General Party, as Leader of the Opposition.

Under the 1997 Constitution, the Leader of the Opposition chose 8 of the 32 members of the Senate, Fiji's upper house of Parliament, and had the right to be consulted about the appointment of the Chief Justice.

List of Leaders of the Opposition in Fiji (1970–present)

No. Portrait Leader
(Birth–Death)
Political Party Term of office
style="background-color:Template:National Federation Party/meta/color; color:white"| 1 Sidiq M. Koya
(1924–1993)
National Federation Party 1970–1977
style="background-color:Template:National Federation Party/meta/color; color:white"| 2 Jai Ram Reddy
(1937–)
National Federation Party 1977–1984
style="background-color:Template:National Federation Party/meta/color; color:white"| (1) Sidiq M. Koya
(1924–1993)
National Federation Party 1984–1987
style="background-color:Template:National Federation Party/meta/color; color:white"| 3 Harish Sharma
(1932–)
National Federation Party 1987
style="background-color:Template:Alliance Party (Fiji)/meta/color; color:black"| 4 Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara
(1920–2004)
Alliance Party 1987
vacant 1987–1992
style="background-color:Template:National Federation Party/meta/color; color:white"| (2) Jai Ram Reddy
(1937–)
National Federation Party 1992–1999
style="background-color:Template:Soqosoqo ni Vakavulewa ni Taukei/meta/color; color:black"| 5 Ratu Inoke Kubuabola
(1948–)
Fijian Political Party 1999–2000
vacant 2000–2001
style="background-color:Template:National Federation Party/meta/color; color:white"| 6 Prem Singh National Federation Party 2001–2002
style="background-color:Template:United Peoples Party (Fiji)/meta/color; color:white"| 7 Millis Malcolm (Mick) Beddoes United General Party[nb 1] 2002–2004
style="background-color: Template:Fiji Labour Party/meta/color; color:white"| 8 Mahendra Chaudhry
(1942–)
Fiji Labour Party 2004–2006
style="background-color: Template:United Peoples Party (Fiji)/meta/color; color:white"| (7) Millis Malcolm (Mick) Beddoes United Peoples Party 2006
vacant 2006–2014
style="background-color: Template:Social Democratic Liberal Party/meta/color; color:white"| 9 Ro Teimumu Kepa
(1945–)
Social Democratic Liberal Party 2014–present

See also

References

Notes
  1. ^ The United General Party was renamed the United People's Party in 2004.
Footnotes