Prime Ministerial Cabinet
Not to be confused with Presidential Cabinet
The Prime Ministerial Cabinet (French: cabinet du premier ministre de la valorie) is a political entity that consists of the six head executives under the prime minister's authority. These executives are, in alphabetical order, the ministers of Education, Finance, Health, Justice, Labor, and the Interior. The cabinet does not include the prime minister or deputy prime minister, although the latter is often part of the cabinet through a ministerial office held in conjunction with the deputy premiership.
All members of the prime minister's cabinet are appointed directly by the prime minister and can be dismissed by the prime minister at any moment. There also exists an impeachment process for both individual cabinet members, and the cabinet as a whole.
The cabinet serves as the prime minister's central advisory body. Executives part of the prime ministerial cabinet are recognizable through the title 'Minister'—their other executive counterparts, secretaries, serve under the president.
Membership
There is no order of precedence among the cabinet of the prime minister, although each individual prime minister is entitled to give more weight or importance to certain ministers. The six current members of the prime minister's cabinet are as follows: