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Maltese Government 2013–2017

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Maltese Government 2013–2017

21st Cabinet of Malta
Incumbent
Date formed11 March 2013
Date dissolved1 May 2017
People and organisations
Head of stateGeorge Abela (2013-2014)
Marie Louise Coleiro Preca (2014-2019)
Head of governmentJoseph Muscat
Total no. of members16
Member partyLabour Party
Opposition partyNationalist Party
Opposition leaderLawrence Gonzi (2013)
Simon Busuttil (2013-2017)
History
Election2013 general election
PredecessorMaltese Government 2008–2013
SuccessorMaltese Government 2017-2022

The Maltese Government 2013–2017 was the current Government of Malta from 11 March 2013 till 1 May 2017. The Maltese government is elected through a General Election for a five-year term (projected dissolution was 10 March 2018). The Head of Government is Joseph Muscat.[1][2] On 1st May 2017, whilst speaking during a Labour Party mass meeting, Prime Minister Joseph Muscat announced a snap general election for June 3 2017, a year before the end of his term.[3]

Cabinet

Portfolio Minister Took office Left office Party
Prime Minister11 March 201313 January 2020 Labour
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of European Affairs11 March 2013Incumbent Labour
Minister for the Economy, Investment and Small Business13 March 20135 June 2017 Labour
Minister for Competitiveness and Digital, Maritime and Services Economy10 March 20139 December 2014 Labour
Minister for Education and Employment11 March 2013Incumbent Labour
Minister within the Office of the Prime Minister [4][5][6]28 April 2016Incumbent Labour
Minister for Energy and Health29 March 201428 April 2016 Labour
Minister for Energy and Water Conservation11 March 201329 March 2014 Labour
Minister for Environment, Sustainable Development, and Climate Change11 March 201328 April 2016 Labour
28 April 2016Incumbent Labour
Minister for Family and Social Solidarity11 March 201329 March 2014 Labour
29 March 2014Incumbent Labour
Minister for Finance11 March 2013Incumbent Labour
Minister for Foreign Affairs11 March 2013Incumbent Labour
Minister for Gozo11 March 20139 June 2017 Labour
Minister for Health11 March 201329 March 2014 Labour
28 April 2016Incumbent Labour
Minister for Home Affairs and National Security11 March 20139 December 2014 Labour
9 December 2014Incumbent Labour
Minister for Justice, Culture and Local Government29 March 201413 January 2020 Labour
Minister for Social Dialogue, Consumer Affairs and Civil Liberties11 March 20135 June 2017 Labour
Minister for Tourism11 March 201329 March 2014 Labour
29 March 2014Incumbent Labour
Minister for Transport and Infrastructure11 March 2013Incumbent Labour


See also

References

  1. ^ The new Cabinet. Times of Malta, 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  2. ^ Ltd, Allied Newspapers. "Cabinet changes bloats costs by €1m a year; team is largest in Malta's history". Times of Malta. Retrieved 2017-05-05.
  3. ^ "Malta PM calls snap election". euronews. 2017-05-01. Retrieved 2017-05-05.
  4. ^ "Prime Minister Portfolio". gov.mt. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
  5. ^ "Hon. Konrad Mizzi MP - Minister within the Office of the Prime Minister". parlament.mt. Archived from the original on 26 March 2017. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
  6. ^ "Speakers - Konrad Mizzi". Set Plan 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2016.