Cabinet of Bolivia
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.
Current Presidency
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 |
Carlos Romero Bonifaz |
14 Jun 2011–present |
|
Oscar Coca Antezana |
2010–14 Jun 2011 |
|
Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Chancellor) |
David Choquehuanca |
2006–present |
|
Ministry of Government |
Wilfredo Chávez |
27 Sep 2011–present |
|
Sacha Sergio Llorenti Soliz |
2010–27 Sep 2011 |
|
Ministry of National Defense |
Rubén Saavedra Soto |
27 Sep 2011– |
|
María Cecilia Chacón Rendón |
6 Apr–26 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 |
Claudia Peña |
14 Jun 2011–present |
|
Carlos Romero Bonifaz |
Feb 2009–14 Jun 2011 |
|
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 |
2006–present |
|
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 |
2009–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. |
Past Cabinets
Evo Morales, 2006–2010
Resources
References
National cabinets of South America
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Sovereign states |
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Dependencies and
other territories |
- Aruba
- Bonaire
- Curaçao
- Falkland Islands
- French Guiana
- South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
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