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: Cabinet of Luis Arce | |
Logo of the Bolivian government | |
Agency overview | |
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Type | Advisory body |
Headquarters | La Paz, Bolivia |
Employees | 18 members: |
Agency executive |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Bolivia |
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Bolivia portal |
Current Cabinet
Cabinet of Bolivia Presidency of Luis Arce, 2020–present | |||||
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Office | Name | Party | Term | Prof. | |
President | Luis Arce | MAS-IPSP | 8 November 2020 – present | Eco. | |
Vice President | David Choquehuanca[lower-alpha 1] | MAS-IPSP | 8 November 2020 – present | Dip. | |
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Worship (Chancellor) |
Rogelio Mayta | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | Law. | |
Minister of the Presidency | María Nela Prada[lower-alpha 2] | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | Dip. | |
Minister of Government | Carlos del Castillo | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | Law. | |
Minister of Defense | Edmundo Novillo | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | Law. | |
Attorney General | Wilfredo Chávez | MAS-IPSP | 12 November 2020 – present | Law. | |
Minister of Economy and Public Finance |
Marcelo Alejandro Gómez García | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | – | |
Minister of Development Planning |
Felima Gabriela Mendoza | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | – | |
Minister of Hydrocarbons and Energies |
Franklin Molina Ortiz | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | – | |
Minister of Productive Development and the Plural Economy |
Néstor Huanca Chura | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | – | |
Minister of Public Works, Services, and Housing |
Edgar Montaño | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | Eng. | |
Minister of Mining and Metallurgy |
Ramiro Félix Villavicencio
Niño de Guzmán |
MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | – | |
Minister of Justice and Institutional Transparency |
Iván Lima | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | Law. | |
Minister of Health and Sports |
Édgar Pozo Valdivia | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – 16 January 2021 | Dr. | |
Jeyson Marcos Auza Pinto | MAS-IPSP | 16 January 2021 – present | – | ||
Minister of Environment and Water |
Juan Santos Cruz | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | – | |
Minister of Education | Adrián Quelca Tarqui | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – present | – | |
Minister of Rural Development and Land |
Wilson Cáceres Cárdenas | MAS-IPSP | 9 November 2020 – 1 December 2020 | – | |
Edwin Ronald Characayo | MAS-IPSP | 1 December 2020 – present | Agr. | ||
Minister of Cultures, Decolonization, and Depatriarchalization |
Sabina Orellana | MAS-IPSP | 20 November 2020 – present | Uni. |
Resources
Notes
References
- Country Studies: Bolivia
- Supreme Decree 29894, 7 February 2009.
- "David Choquehuanca asume la presidencia hasta mañana". www.paginasiete.bo (in Spanish). Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- Bolivia, Opinión. "Prada: "El viejo Estado arrojó gobiernos que expresaban intereses de minorías con la cabeza en el extranjero"". Opinión Bolivia (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 February 2021.
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