Prime Minister of Valoria
For a list of officeholders, see List of Prime Ministers of Valoria.
Prime Minister of Valoria | |
---|---|
Incumbent Valerie Minerva since February 1st, 2024 | |
Style | Madam Prime Minister / Madam Timekeeper (informal) The Honorable (formal) Her Excellency (diplomatic) |
Type | Head of government |
Residence | Executive Mansion |
Seat | Boston |
Appointer | Popular vote, or via succession from deputy |
Term length | 2 years, 6 months (renewable) |
Formation | September 26th, 1762 |
First holder | John Cooper |
Salary | $390,625 per year |
The Prime Minister of Valoria (French: Premier Ministre de la Valorie), sometimes referred to as the Timekeeper (Chronométreu[r/se]), is the head of government of Valoria.
Originally created in 1762, the premiership under its current form dates back to the founding of the Second Republic in 2014. The prime minister oversees their cabinet, which includes the heads of the ministries of Finance, Education, Labor, Health, Justice, and the Interior, as well as a number of independent government agencies, such as the VEA.
The prime minister is of equal official rank to the president, with whom they share the Executive Mansion, their official residence. The prime minister's office is located in the West Wing, a term which has since become synonymous with the office.
Since February 1st, 2024, the office has been held by Valerie Minerva.
History
First Republic (1762 - 1942)
Absolute Monarchy & Suspension (1942 - 1976)
Reinstatement & Constitutional Monarchy (1976 - 2012)
Transitionary Period (2012 - 2014)
Second Republic (2014 - present)
Election
Powers
Executive Powers
Appointments
The prime minister of Valoria is personally responsible for over two thousand government appointments. Most, but not all, of these appointments are made unilaterally, without confirmation by the National Assembly or another body. Most notably, the prime minister's cabinet choices do not need confirmation by the National Assembly.
Parliamentary Powers
Political Powers
Impeachment & Succession
The prime minister is impeachable by a two-thirds majority of the National Assembly. Although motions of impeachment have been drafted against the majority of officeholders, no prime minister has ever been impeached.
Historically, three prime ministers have vacated office intra-term, although each via different method: Keith Hill (in office 1789–1790), who died from tuberculosis ten months into his term; Phillip Matthews (in office 1906–1910), who resigned a little over a year into his second term due to fractures in his party; and Charles Reynolds (in office 2010–2012), who was assassinated two years into his term.
In case of death, incapacitation, impeachment, or resignation, the prime minister is succeeded by the deputy prime minister (although this has never occurred). Historically, before the position was created, the National Assembly was tasked with nominating a successor, with the chairman serving as acting prime minister in the interim.
List of Prime Ministers
42 individuals have served as prime minister since Valoria's founding. Anthony Vanwall, who served in a similar capacity before the office was established, from 1756 to 1762, was retroactively offered the title, however declined it. 4 have served non-consecutive terms: James Mansell, Graham Coulthard, Nathan Crawford, and Nicholas Augustine.
There are currently 5 living former officeholders: Steven Lawrence, Eric Henderson, Anthony Collins, Julia Anne-Claire, and Arthur Reinhardt.
No. | Name | In Office | Political Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|
1 | John Cooper | 1762–1768 | Unaffiliated |
2 | Phillip Edwards | 1768–1771 | Unaffiliated |
3 | Colinn Clark | 1771–1774 | Reformist |
4 | John Sparrow | 1774–1777 | Purist |
5 | Theodore May | 1777–1783 | Reformist |
6 | Arthur Brabham | 1783–1789 | Reformist |
7 | Keith Hill | 1789–1790 | Reformist |
8 | Jacques Lagardère | 1790–1795 | Reformist |
9 | Ken Stewart | 1795–1801 | Purist |
10 | William Peterson | 1801–1807 | Purist |
11 | David Hailwood | 1807–1810 | Reformist |
12 | Nicholas Evans | 1810–1816 | Purist |
13 | Albert Jones | 1816–1828 | Reformist |
14 | Simon Daniels | 1828–1831 | Reformist |
15 | Henri Tambay | 1831–1837 | Purist |
16 | Marshall Watson | 1837–1846 | Reformist |
17 | James Mansell | 1846–1858 1861–1864 |
Purist |
18 | Graham Coulthard | 1858–1861 1864–1870 |
Reformist |
19 | Paul Marshalls | 1870–1876 | Reformist |
20 | Paul Herbert | 1876–1879 | Purist |
21 | Charles Hudson | 1879–1885 | Conference |
22 | Pierre Bourdais | 1885–1891 | Conference |
23 | Charles Busch | 1891–1897 | Conference |
24 | Samuel Waters | 1897–1903 | Reformist (1897–1900) Unaffiliated (1900–1903) |
25 | Alexander Brawn | 1903–1906 | Conference |
26 | Phillip Matthews | 1906–1910 | Reformist |
27 | Mark Alan | 1910–1921 | Movement |
28 | David Welds | 1921–1930 | Movement |
29 | Michael Augustine | 1930–1942 | Conference |
30 | Nathan Crawford | 1976–1979 1989–1992 |
Movement |
31 | Matthew Anderson | 1979–1984 | Movement |
32 | Samuel Scott | 1984–1986 | Conference |
33 | Nicholas Augustine | 1986–1989 1997–1999 |
Conference |
34 | Ryan Collins | 1992–1994 | Movement |
35 | Ethan Taylor | 1994–1997 | Conference |
36 | Steven Lawrence | 1999–2002 | Movement |
37 | Eric Henderson | 2002–2010 | Conference |
38 | Charles Reynolds | 2010–2012 | Unaffiliated |
39 | Anthony Collins | 2012–2016 | Movement |
40 | Julia Anne-Claire | 2016–2021 | Movement |
41 | Arthur Reinhardt | 2021–2024 | Movement |
42 | Valerie Minerva | 2024–present | Conference |