- Cabinet of Bolivia
-
Cabinet of Bolivia
Second Presidency of Evo Morales, 2010–Office Name Term Presidency Evo Morales 2006–present Vice Presidency Álvaro García Linera 2006–present Ministry of the Presidency Oscar Coca Antezana 2010–present Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Chancellor) David Choquehuanca 2006–present Ministry of Government Sacha Sergio Llorenti Soliz 2010–present Ministry of National Defense María Cecilia Chacón Rendón 6 Apr–24 Sep 2011 Rubén Saavedra Soto 2010—6 Apr 2011 Solicitor General's Office Hugo Raúl Montero Lara 8 Feb 2011–present replaced Ministry of Legal Defense of the State Arismendi Chumacero 2010—8 Feb 2011 Ministry of Cultures Elizabeth Salguero 16 Feb 2011–present Zulma Yugar Párraga 2010—16 Feb 2011 Ministry of Development Planning Elba Viviana Caro Hinojosa 2010–present Ministry of Autonomy Carlos Romero Bonifaz Feb 2009–present Ministry of Education Roberto Aguilar 2008–present Ministry of Rural Development and Land Nemecia Achacollo Tola 2010–present Ministry of Economy and Finance Luis Alberto Arce Catacora Ministry of Public Works, Services, and Housing Walter Juvenal Delgadillo Terceros Ministry of Mining and Metallurgy José Antonio Pimentel Castillo 29 Jan 2010–present Milton Gómez Mamani 23–29 Jan 2010 Ministry of Justice Nilda Copa Condori 2010–present Ministry of Health and Sports Nila Heredia Miranda May 2010–present Sonia Polo Jan 2010–May 2010 Ministry of Work, Employment, and Social Security Daniel Santalla 2 Jun 2011–present Félix Rojas Gutiérrez Feb–2 Jun 2011 Carmen Trujillo Cárdenas 2010–16 Feb 2011 Ministry of Institutional Transparency and the Fight against Corruption Nardi Suxo 2010–present Ministry of Hydrocarbons and Energy José Luis Gutiérrez Pérez 2011–present Luis Fernando Vincenti February 2010–2011 Ministry of the Environment and Water Julieta Monje Villa 2011–present María Esther Udaeta 2010–2011 Ministry of Productive Development and the Plural Economy Ana Teresa Morales 2011–present Antonia Rodriguez 2010–2011 Ministry of Communication created 16 February 2011 Iván Canelas Feb 2011—present Unless otherwise specified, Ministerial transitions occurred during annual appointments in January: on 23 January in both 2010 and 2011. Council of Ministers of Bolivia, or Cabinet of Bolivia, is part of the executive branch of the Bolivian government, consisting of the heads of the variable number of government ministries. The Council of Ministers are ministers of state and conduct the day-to-day business of public administration within Bolivia.[1] The President of Bolivia may freely reorganize the executive branch, with the most recent comprehensive reorganization occurring in February 2009.[2] Since then, the Ministry for the Legal Defense of the State has become the independent office of Solicitor General, and the Ministry of Communication has been created.
Resources
References
- ^ Country Studies: Bolivia
- ^ Supreme Decree 29894, 7 February 2009.
National cabinets of South America Sovereign states Dependencies and
other territories- Aruba
- Bonaire
- Curaçao
- Falkland Islands
- French Guiana
This Bolivia-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. Categories:- Government of Bolivia
- National cabinets
- Bolivia stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
Bolivia — This article is about the South American country. For other uses, see Bolivia (disambiguation). Plurinational State of Bolivia Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia … Wikipedia
Bolivia — • Includes history, geography, education, church, and government information Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Bolivia Bolivia † … Catholic encyclopedia
Bolivia — Bolivian, adj., n. /beuh liv ee euh, boh /; Sp. /baw lee vyah/, n. 1. a republic in W South America. 7,669,868; 404,388 sq. mi. (1,047,370 sq. km). Caps.: La Paz and Sucre. 2. (often l.c.) a twill fabric made of cut pile with lines either in the… … Universalium
Bolivia — <p></p> <p></p> Introduction ::Bolivia <p></p> Background: <p></p> Bolivia, named after independence fighter Simon BOLIVAR, broke away from Spanish rule in 1825; much of its subsequent history has… … The World Factbook
Bolivia — (1971–1982) On 18–22 August 1971 Colonel Hugo Banzer Suárez overthrew the leftist General Juan José Torres González, establishing a dictatorship known as the Banzerato (1971–1978). There are no official estimates of the human rights abuses… … Historical Dictionary of the “Dirty Wars”
Cabinet of Peru — Peru This article is part of the series: Politics and government of Peru … Wikipedia
Outline of Bolivia — … Wikipedia
Law enforcement in Bolivia — Bolivian National Police Corps Cuerpo de Policía Nacional Abbreviation CdPN Agency overview Formed 1886 Employees 31,000 Legal personality … Wikipedia
Narcotics in Bolivia — Contents 1 Coca 2 Narcotics Trafficking 3 Narcoterrorism 4 Narcotics Corruption … Wikipedia
Peru — Peruvian /peuh rooh vee euhn/, adj., n. /peuh rooh /, n. 1. Spanish, Perú /pe rddooh /. a republic in W South America. 24,949,512; 496,222 sq. mi. (1,285,215 sq. km). Cap.: Lima. 2. a city in N central Indiana. 13,764. 3. a city in N Illinois. 10 … Universalium