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Government of Wiltshire: Difference between revisions

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The '''Government of Wiltshire''', formally the '''Government of the Wiltshire Fifth Republic''', is the central government of the [[Wiltshire|Fifth Wiltshire Republic]]. It is also commonly referred to as the '''Wiltshirian Government''', the '''National Assembly Government''', or the '''Federal Government'''. Β 
Β  [[Category:Politics]]
[[File:Wiltshiregovernmentlogo.png|right|frameless|485x485px]]
The '''Government of Wiltshire''', officially the '''Government of the Wiltshirian Commonwealth''', or '''His Excellency's Government (HEG)''', is the central executive authority within in the [[Wiltshire|Wiltshirian Commonwealth]]. It is composed of the prime minister (Patrick Rivers, since January 3026), who is the head of government, as well as both senior and junior ministers of state. The government is currently composed on the [[Wiltshire Labour Party|Labour party]], which holds a minority government following the [[3026 Wiltshire general election|3026 election]]. The prime minister and his most senior ministers of state belong to the supreme decision-making committee, known as the [[Rivers ministry|Cabinet]]. Β 


The government is led by the [[Prime Minister of Wiltshire]], who selects all other ministers. The Prime Minister and their most senior ministers belong to the supreme decision-making committee, known as the Cabinet. The government ministers all sit in the [[Wiltshire National Assembly]], and are accountable to it. The government is dependent on the Assembly to make primary legislation, and so is elected through the legislative elections which occur following the dissolution of the National Assembly. Following the legislative elections, the [[President of Wiltshire]] (currently Sonya Inyo) appoints the Prime Minister to form the government. The Prime Minister requires the confidence of the President and the National Assembly (through majority support). Β 
Ministers of state are responsible to the National Assembly in which they sit; they make statements in the Assembly and take questions from assemblymen. The government is dependant on the National Assembly to make primary legislation, and general elections are held at least every once every calendar year to elect a new National Assembly, unless the prime minister advises the monarch (the [[Governor-General of Wiltshire|governor-general]]) to dissolve the National Assembly, in which case an election may be held sooner. After an election, the monarch selects as prime minister the leader of the party most likely to command the confidence of the Assembly, usually by possessing the expressed support of a majority of assemblymen.


According to Wiltshire Basic Law, executive power lies with the President. However, the President empowers the government to exercise the running of the country. This is done in the name of the President. Members of the cabinet unite with the President's Secretaries to form the [[President's Privy Council|Privy Council]], a unified advisory council of government ministers, Presidentially appointed secretaries and the Prime Minister. Β 
Under the codified Commonwealth constitution, known as the Act of Settlement, executive authority lies with the governor-general, which is thereafter entrusted into the government through the process of prime ministerial appointment and cabinet formation. The governor-general can select whatever degree of executive authority to devolve to the government, with the current monarch choosing to reserve housing policy for his own decree. The government of the Wiltshirian Commonwealth is unique to previous forms of government in Wiltshire as it does not operate under the principles of '''parliamentary sovereignty''': the sovereignty is held by the governor-general, and constitutionality is reserved by the [[BalancΓ­n Monarchy|BalancΓ­n Crown]] and [[BalancΓ­n Parliament|Parliament]]. Many have described this set up as one of vassalage.


The current Prime Minister is [[Mitchell A. Crawley]] who leads a [[Crawley Ministry (Wiltshire)|minority Stability government.]]
== Government-in-Assembly ==
The government is required by the Act of Settlement - and for practical reasons - to maintain the confidence of the National Assembly. It requires the support of assemblymen for the maintenance of supply (by voting through the government's budgets) and to pass primary legislation. By convention, if a government loses the confidence of the National Assembly, then it must either resign or hold a general election. Β 


== Cabinet ==
The prime minister is held to account during question time, which provides an opportunity for assemblymen from all parties to question and scrutinise the government on any subject at the highest level of political leadership. There are also departmental questions, where ministers of state are required to answer questions relating to their specific Office of State. Β 
The cabinet of the Fourth Wiltshire Republic is the senior advisory and decision making body for the government. Chaired by the Prime Minister, the cabinet is responsible for the execution of government business with members being granted different portfolios. Members of the cabinet are called Ministers. The current cabinet is that of the [[Crawley Ministry (Wiltshire)|Crawley Ministry]]. Β 


The cabinet is a separate body to the [[President's Privy Council]], however, all members of the cabinet are invited to be members of the Privy Council. The Privy Council, in contrast to the cabinet, is the chief advisory board to the [[President of Wiltshire]].
== Offices of State ==
Β 
The government is subdivided into nine offices of state, each being led by a minister of state. These ministers comprise the cabinet.
== Devolved Government ==
{| class="wikitable"
On 20 August 3020, there was a re-organization of devolved government in Wiltshire. Following the re-organization, there are to be 6 devolved local governments with authority over devolved matters, such as the execution of healthcare, education, utilities and services, and the judiciary. Following the annexation of Lorikeet and Rockfield, there gained an additional 2 local authorities. The 8 local authorities are;
|+
{| class="article-table"
!Office of State
!City
!Policy portfolio
! colspan="2" |Mayor
!Responsible minister
!Mayor's party
!City Council Control
|-
|-
|[[Arches]]
|Cabinet Office
|[[Helen Richards]]
|
|[[File:HRichards.jpg|thumb|238x238px]]
* Government communications
|Liberal Conservative
* Strategic leadership
|Labour (minority)
* Public administration and the civil service
* Disaster preparedness and emergency operations
* Public standard and anti-corruption
* Election management
|[[Patrick Rivers]] as [[Prime Minister of Wiltshire|prime minister]]
|-
|-
|[[Juneville]]
|Treasury Office (sometimes known as the Exchequer)
|[[William Tork]]
|
|[[File:Tork.jpg|thumb|248x248px]]
* Fiscal policy
|Labour
* Monetary policy
|Labour (majority)
* Tax administration and revenue collection
|[[Gavin Thompson]] as [[Chancellor of the Exchequer|chancellor of the exchequer]]
|-
|-
|[[Minevgrad]]
|Foreign Office
|Vladimir Bragin
|
|
|Stability
* Diplomacy
|Labour (majority)
* International affairs
* International development
|[[Jenna Wilkie]] as [[Foreign Minister (Wiltshire)|foreign minister]]
|-
|-
|[[Newton]]
|Labour Office
|[[Peter Broadcliff]]
|
|
|Liberal Conservative
* Work and pensions
|LibCon/Stability (coalition)
* Welfare
* Union relations and worker's rights
* Commercial regulation and protection
* Education and social policy
* Healthcare
|[[Alan Kelly]] as labour minister
|-
|-
|[[Walkerton]]
|Interior Office
|[[Tony Barnett]]
|
|
|Stability
* Utilities management and energy
|LibCon/Stability (coalition)
* The Public Corporation
* Environment and land management
* Communities, cities, and local government
* Culture
* The food and water strategy
|Liesbeth Margo as interior minister
|-
|-
|[[Washington]]
|Defence Office
|[[Henley Halifax]]
|
|[[File:Halifax.jpg|thumb]]
* Military and strategic security policy
|Labour
* Civil defence
|Labour (minority)
* Arms manufacturing
|Penny May as [[Defence Minister (Wiltshire)|defence minister]]
|-
|-
|[[Lorikeet]]
|Progress Office
|[[Leo Jakarta]]
|
|[[File:LeoJakarta.jpg|thumb]]
* Investment and economic development
|Kaikaki Ropu
* Transport and infrastructure
|Kaikaki Ropu (majority)
* Housing and urban development
* Trade
* Digital integration and modernisation
* Research, technology, and space
|[[Dennis Drakeford]] as [[Progress Minister (Wiltshire)|progress minister]]
|-
|Home Office
|
* Policing and law enforcement
* Immigration
* Intelligence and homeland security
* Cybersecurity
* Information and propaganda
* Wiltshirianification
|Elliot Macintosh as [[Home Minister (Wiltshire)|home minister]]
|-
|-
|[[Rockfield]]
|Justice Office
|Otero Velasco
|
|
|Stability
* Criminal justice system
|TBD
* Constitutionality
|Peter RT Harris as [[Attorney General of Wiltshire|attorney general]]
|}
|}
[[Category:Politics]]

Latest revision as of 12:40, 25 January 2026

The Government of Wiltshire, officially the Government of the Wiltshirian Commonwealth, or His Excellency's Government (HEG), is the central executive authority within in the Wiltshirian Commonwealth. It is composed of the prime minister (Patrick Rivers, since January 3026), who is the head of government, as well as both senior and junior ministers of state. The government is currently composed on the Labour party, which holds a minority government following the 3026 election. The prime minister and his most senior ministers of state belong to the supreme decision-making committee, known as the Cabinet.

Ministers of state are responsible to the National Assembly in which they sit; they make statements in the Assembly and take questions from assemblymen. The government is dependant on the National Assembly to make primary legislation, and general elections are held at least every once every calendar year to elect a new National Assembly, unless the prime minister advises the monarch (the governor-general) to dissolve the National Assembly, in which case an election may be held sooner. After an election, the monarch selects as prime minister the leader of the party most likely to command the confidence of the Assembly, usually by possessing the expressed support of a majority of assemblymen.

Under the codified Commonwealth constitution, known as the Act of Settlement, executive authority lies with the governor-general, which is thereafter entrusted into the government through the process of prime ministerial appointment and cabinet formation. The governor-general can select whatever degree of executive authority to devolve to the government, with the current monarch choosing to reserve housing policy for his own decree. The government of the Wiltshirian Commonwealth is unique to previous forms of government in Wiltshire as it does not operate under the principles of parliamentary sovereignty: the sovereignty is held by the governor-general, and constitutionality is reserved by the BalancΓ­n Crown and Parliament. Many have described this set up as one of vassalage.

Government-in-Assembly

The government is required by the Act of Settlement - and for practical reasons - to maintain the confidence of the National Assembly. It requires the support of assemblymen for the maintenance of supply (by voting through the government's budgets) and to pass primary legislation. By convention, if a government loses the confidence of the National Assembly, then it must either resign or hold a general election.

The prime minister is held to account during question time, which provides an opportunity for assemblymen from all parties to question and scrutinise the government on any subject at the highest level of political leadership. There are also departmental questions, where ministers of state are required to answer questions relating to their specific Office of State.

Offices of State

The government is subdivided into nine offices of state, each being led by a minister of state. These ministers comprise the cabinet.

Office of State Policy portfolio Responsible minister
Cabinet Office
  • Government communications
  • Strategic leadership
  • Public administration and the civil service
  • Disaster preparedness and emergency operations
  • Public standard and anti-corruption
  • Election management
Patrick Rivers as prime minister
Treasury Office (sometimes known as the Exchequer)
  • Fiscal policy
  • Monetary policy
  • Tax administration and revenue collection
Gavin Thompson as chancellor of the exchequer
Foreign Office
  • Diplomacy
  • International affairs
  • International development
Jenna Wilkie as foreign minister
Labour Office
  • Work and pensions
  • Welfare
  • Union relations and worker's rights
  • Commercial regulation and protection
  • Education and social policy
  • Healthcare
Alan Kelly as labour minister
Interior Office
  • Utilities management and energy
  • The Public Corporation
  • Environment and land management
  • Communities, cities, and local government
  • Culture
  • The food and water strategy
Liesbeth Margo as interior minister
Defence Office
  • Military and strategic security policy
  • Civil defence
  • Arms manufacturing
Penny May as defence minister
Progress Office
  • Investment and economic development
  • Transport and infrastructure
  • Housing and urban development
  • Trade
  • Digital integration and modernisation
  • Research, technology, and space
Dennis Drakeford as progress minister
Home Office
  • Policing and law enforcement
  • Immigration
  • Intelligence and homeland security
  • Cybersecurity
  • Information and propaganda
  • Wiltshirianification
Elliot Macintosh as home minister
Justice Office
  • Criminal justice system
  • Constitutionality
Peter RT Harris as attorney general