Minister (government)
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A minister is a politician who holds significant public office in a national or regional government, making and implementing decisions on policies in conjunction with the other ministers. Some ministers are more senior than others, and are usually members of the government's cabinet. In some countries the head of government is designated the "prime minister". A government minister with responsibility for religion, such as the Israeli Minister of Religious Services, may be a layperson or cleric but the title should not be confused with the religious position of "Minister (Christianity)" or the activity of Christian ministry.
Etymology
In some countries and territories, including Hong Kong, the Philippines, the United Kingdom, and the United States, holders of some posts equivalent to ministries are called secretaries of state, sometimes referred to simply as secretaries (e.g., the Home Secretary).
The term "minister" is also used in diplomacy with the quite different meaning of second-level diplomats (heads of legations). The term minister comes from Middle English, deriving from the Old French word ministre, originally minister in Latin, meaning "servant, attendant", which itself was derived from the word 'minus' meaning "less".[1]
Selection
In some parliamentary and semi-presidential systems of government, ministers are selected from the elected legislature (Australia, United Kingdom), while in others with strict separation of powers, ministers cannot be members of the legislature (Belgium, Mexico, Netherlands, Philippines, United States); a legislator chosen to become a cabinet minister resigns from the legislature. Normally the leader of the majority party becomes the prime minister and selects the other ministers. In the Westminster system, these ministers continue to represent their constituency in parliament while being part of the government. Often, a person from the outside may be appointed minister, usually in order to bring special skills to the government. Such a person would not be part of the parliament while serving as minister, nor would he/she necessarily be a member of the party/parties in government.
In some presidential systems of government (Mexico, Philippines, United States), ministers are formally titled secretaries because the term minister was considered to carry royalist connotations considered inappropriate in a republic.
Types of ministers
Various countries form ministries as Cabinets. Compare List of cabinets. Other cabinets are usually included in Politics of ..-articles
- Lists of incumbents groups lists of ministers by country
Specific ministers include:
- Agriculture minister
- Climate change minister
- Commerce minister
- Communication minister
- Culture minister
- Defence minister
- Deputy prime minister
- Education minister
- Energy minister
- Environment minister
- Finance minister
- Fisheries minister
- Food minister
- Foreign minister
- Forestry minister
- Health minister
- Home minister
- Housing minister
- Immigration minister
- Industry minister
- Information minister
- Inland revenue minister
- Interior minister
- Justice minister
- Labour minister
- Marine affairs minister
- Mining minister
- Natural resources minister
- Planning minister
- Prime minister
- Public works minister
- Science minister
- Sports minister
- Tourism minister
- Transport minister
- Water resources minister
Some ministers may hold multiple portfolios and lead several ministries simultaneously, while multiple ministers with separate portfolios may oversee a single ministry, or may also share both ministerial and deputy-ministerial portfolios in different ministries. A cabinet minister may not be in charge of any ministry, and is then known as a "minister without portfolio".
See also
- Minister of the Crown
- Ministry (government department)
- Ministry (collective executive)
- Ministry of Truth (George Orwell, fiction)
References
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