Executive Council of New Zealand

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The Executive Council of New Zealand is the highest formal governmental body in New Zealand. All Ministers must be appointed as Executive Councillors before they are appointed as Ministers. The Governor-General signs a warrant of appointment for each member of the Executive Council, and separate warrants for each ministerial portfolio. Each Executive Councillor must take the relevant oaths or affirmations set out in legislation.[1][2]

The Executive Council's primary function is to issue Orders in Council, which operate under the authority of the Governor-General in Council. Any three members of the Executive Council constitute a quorum. It has a function similar to that served by the Privy Council in the United Kingdom. The authority for its existence is provided by Letters Patent.[3]

According to the New Zealand Cabinet Manual 2008:[4]

The Executive Council, which is constituted by the Letters Patent, is the highest formal instrument of government. It is the institution through which the government collectively and formally advises the Governor-General.
Action by the Governor-General in Council requires two elements:
a. a recommendation by a Minister or Ministers (that is, a member or members of the Executive Council); and
b. the advice and consent of the Executive Council that the Governor-General in Council act in accordance with the Minister's recommendation.
Orders in Council are the main method, apart from Acts of Parliament, by which the government implements decisions that require the force of law. Meetings of the Executive Council are called for the purpose of making such Orders and carrying out other formal acts of state.
The submission of almost all items for consideration by the Executive Council must be authorised by Cabinet.

The Governor-General of New Zealand presides over, but is not a member of, the Executive Council. The Clerk of the Executive Council, who is also the Secretary of the Cabinet, is appointed by the Governor-General on advice of the Prime Minister, and is responsible for attending all meetings of the Council and keeping records of its meetings, as well as for coordinating any official support or advice to the Governor-General. The Clerk also countersigns any Order in Council, proclamation, or other legal instrument issued by the Governor-General.[5]

The Executive Council meets every Monday to formally advise the Governor-General to sign Orders in Council (regarding regulations and appointments, for example), and may also informally brief the Governor-General on political developments and constitutional issues that have arisen.[6]

Officially, the Executive Council exists to advise the Governor-General; it was the counterpart to the Legislative Council, the now-defunct upper house of the Parliament of New Zealand. To be an Executive Councillor, one must normally be a Member of Parliament (this was codified in the Constitution Act of 1986). However, one may serve up to thirty days without being an MP; this is to allow for the transition of members not yet sworn in and members who have retired or been defeated.

Members of the Executive Council are referred to as Ministers of the Crown, which is not equivalent to being a Cabinet Minister. Their appointment as members of the Council gives them the authority to exercise executive power. Most members of the Executive Council are Cabinet Ministers, but some are appointed as so-called "Minister outside Cabinet" who traditionally hold minor portfolios or serve as Associate Ministers, with carefully specified powers and responsibilities delegated to them by relevant portfolio ministers. However, this is not always the case.

One of the first instances in which a Minister of the Crown did not hold a seat in Cabinet occurred when David Lange served as Attorney-General from 1989 to 1990 after resigning as Prime Minister. The appointment of Winston Peters as Minister of Foreign Affairs and Peter Dunne as Minister of Revenue subsequent to the 2005 general election saw the status of Ministers outside Cabinet develop significantly, given that they were appointed to important ministerial positions outside Cabinet in exchange for their parties supporting the Government on matters of confidence and money supply while being required to defend Government policies only within their spheres of ministerial responsibility.

There have also been Ministers without Portfolio, e.g., Mark Fagan from 1935 to 1939, who was briefly acting Minister of Customs in 1939. He was followed by David Wilson from 1939 to 1949, who was Minister of Immigration 1940-44. They were members of the Legislative Council, but not of the Lower House.

See also

References

  1. New Zealand Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Executive Council "Executive Council" Check |url= value (help). Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  2. Government of New Zealand. "Ministers; Appointment (paragraph 2.17)". Cabinet Manual 2008. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  3. Letters Patent Constituting the Office of Governor-General of New Zealand, sections VII through X
  4. Government of New Zealand. "Executive Council". Cabinet Manual 2008. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  5. New Zealand Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Executive Council "Executive Council" Check |url= value (help). Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  6. New Zealand Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Executive Council "Executive Council" Check |url= value (help). Retrieved 25 January 2014.

External links

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