Governor-General of Jamaica
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Governor-General of Jamaica | |
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Viceroy | |
Incumbent: Sir Kenneth O. Hall |
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Style: |
His Excellency |
Appointed by: |
Elizabeth II as Queen of Jamaica |
First viceroy: |
Sir Kenneth Blackburne |
Formation: |
August 6, 1962 |
Jamaica |
This article is part of the series: |
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Other countries · Atlas Politics Portal |
The Governor-General of Jamaica represents the Jamaican monarch, and head of state, who holds the title of King or Queen of Jamaica (as of 2007, Elizabeth II).
The Queen, on the advice of the Prime Minister, appoints a Governor-General to be her representative in Jamaica. Neither the Queen nor the Governor-General has any real authority in conducting the administration of the country (however, both possess reserve powers under the constitution which would allow them full control of the nation's governance whenever in their opinion a case of emergency requiring such action arises). Real legislative and executive responsibilities rest with the elected representatives of the people.
The Governor-General represents the Queen on ceremonial occasions such as the opening of Parliament, the presentation of honours and military parades. Under the Constitution, he is given authority to act in some matters, for example in appointing and disciplining officers of the civil service, in proroguing Parliament and so on, but only in a few cases is he empowered to act entirely on his own discretion.[1]
[edit] Governors-General of Jamaica, 1962-present
- Sir Kenneth Blackburne (6 August–30 November 1962)
- Sir Clifford Campbell (1 December 1962–2 March 1973)
- Sir Herbert Duffus (2 March–27 June 1973) (acting)
- Sir Florizel Glasspole (27 June 1973–31 March 1991)
- Edward Zacca (31 March–1 August 1991) (acting)
- Sir Howard Cooke (1 August 1991–15 February 2006)
- Sir Kenneth O. Hall (15 February 2006–)
[edit] References
- ^ "Government of Jamaica", Jamaica Information Service
[edit] See also
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