Prime_Minister_of_Georgia

Prime Minister of Georgia

Prime Minister of Georgia

Head of government of Georgia


The prime minister of Georgia (Georgian: საქართველოს პრემიერ-მინისტრი, romanized: sakartvelos p'remier-minist'ri) is the head of government and chief executive of Georgia.

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In Georgia, the president is a ceremonial head of state and mainly acts as a figurehead. The executive power is vested in the Government. The prime minister organizes, directs, and controls the functions of the Government. He also signs its legal acts. They appoint and dismiss ministers in the Cabinet. The prime minister represents Georgia in foreign relations and concludes international treaties on behalf of Georgia. They are accountable for the activities of the Government before the Parliament of Georgia.[2]

The prime minister is nominated by a political party that has secured the best results in the parliamentary election. The nominee must win the Confidence vote of the Parliament. The current prime minister is Irakli Kobakhidze, who was nominated by the ruling Georgian Dream party on 2 February and his government was approved on 8 February, 2024.[3][4]

History

The office of prime minister under the name of the chairman of Government was introduced in Georgia upon its declaration of independence in May 1918. It was abolished with the Soviet takeover of the country in February 1921. The newly independent Georgia established the position of prime minister in August 1991, only to be abolished de facto in the aftermath of the January 1992 military coup and legally in the 1995 Constitution. The office was reintroduced in the February 2004 constitutional amendment and further modified as a result of series of amendments passed between 2012 and 2018.

From the office's reestablishment in 2004 and throughout the presidency of Mikheil Saakashvili, the prime minister was appointed by the President and served as his chief adviser, while the President exercised most of the executive powers. However, after the entry into force of the 2012 and 2018 constitutional amendments, that instituted Georgia as a parliamentary republic, the president's executive powers were eliminated and transferred to the prime minister.

Qualifications

The office of prime minister may not be held by a citizen of Georgia who is simultaneously the citizen of another country.[5]

Appointment

The prime minister is nominated by a political party that has secured the best results in the parliamentary election. The nominee for premiership and his ministerial candidates must win the confidence vote of the Parliament and then, within 2 days of a vote of confidence, be formally appointed by the president of Georgia. If the president does not appoint the prime minister within the established time frame, the prime minister will be appointed automatically. If the parliamentary vote of confidence is not passed within the established time frame, the president dissolves the Parliament no earlier than two weeks and no later than three weeks after the respective time frame has expired, and calls extraordinary parliamentary election.[6]

Functions

The prime minister of Georgia is the head of the Government, responsible for government activities and appointment and dismissal of ministers. They are accountable before the parliament. The prime minister signs the legal acts of the government[2] and countersigns some of the acts issued by the president of Georgia.[7]

The prime minister has the right to use the Defense Forces without the Parliament's approval during martial law.[8] During the martial law, the prime minister becomes a member of the National Defense Council, a consultative body chaired by the president of Georgia.[9] Although it is the president who is officially the commander-in-chief, in practice, the military is managed by the Government and prime minister.

The prime minister is also the head of the National Security Council.

List of officeholders

Democratic Republic of Georgia (1918–1921)

Chairman of Government (1918–1921)

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Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic (1921–1991)

Chairmen of the Council of People's Commissars (1921–1946)

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Chairmen of the Council of Ministers (1946–1991)

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Georgia (since 1991)

Prime minister (1991–1995)

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State Minister (1995–2004)

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Prime minister (2004–present)

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Timeline

Irakli KobakhidzeMaya TskitishviliGiorgi GakhariaMamuka BakhtadzeGiorgi KvirikashviliIrakli GaribashviliBidzina IvanishviliVano MerabishviliNika GilauriGrigol MgaloblishviliLado GurgenidzeGiorgi BaramidzeZurab NoghaideliMikheil SaakashviliZurab ZhvaniaAvtandil JorbenadzeGiorgi ArsenishviliVazha LortkipanidzeNiko LekishviliOtar PatsatsiaEduard ShevardnadzeBesarion GugushviliMurman OmanidzeTengiz SiguaNodari ChitanavaZurab ChkheidzeOtar CherkeziaDmitry KartvelishviliZurab PataridzeGivi JavakhishviliZakhary KetskhoveliZakhary ChkhubianishviliValerian BakradzeGerman MgaloblishviliLevan SukhishviliFilipp MakharadzeLavrenty KartvelishviliShalva EliavaSergey KavtaradzePolikarp MdivaniNoe ZhordaniaNoe Ramishvili

Notes

  1. Prime Minister of the rebel government at Zugdidi 24 September—6 November 1993

References

  1. Article 55, Section 1–5 of the Constitution of Georgia (country) (2018)
  2. "Ruling party congress elects outgoing PM as new Chair, nominates replacement". Agenda.ge. 1 February 2024. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  3. "Candidate for PM to present Gov't programme to Parliament". Agenda.ge. 1 February 2024. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  4. Article 25, Section 2 of the Constitution of Georgia (country) (2018)
  5. Article 56, Section 1–5 of the Constitution of Georgia (country) (2018)
  6. Article 53, Section 2 of the Constitution of Georgia (country) (2018)
  7. Article 72, Section 1 of the Constitution of Georgia (country) (2018)
  8. Article 73, Section 1 of the Constitution of Georgia (country) (2018)

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