Chair-in-Office of the Commonwealth of Nations | |
---|---|
Term length | 2 years |
Inaugural holder | Thabo Mbeki |
Formation | 12 November 1999 |
Website | Chair-in-Office |
The Commonwealth Chair-in-Office (CIO) is the Chair-in-Office of the Commonwealth of Nations, and is one of the main leadership positions in the Commonwealth. It is held by the host chairperson of the previous Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), and is maintained until the next CHOGM. [1] Currently, the incumbent Chair-in-Office is also the President of Rwanda.
The primary responsibility of the Chair-in-Office is to host the CHOGM, but their roles can be expanded. For example, after the 2002 CHOGM, the incumbent, previous, and next Chairmen-in-Office formed a troika in an attempt to resolve the ongoing dispute over Zimbabwe's membership of the Commonwealth.
The position was created after the 1999 CHOGM, with Thabo Mbeki becoming the first Chair-in-Office. However, Mbeki did very little to develop the position,[ citation needed ] leaving it virtually vacant until the next CHOGM in 2002, when the troika was created. Even after John Howard became Chair, the troika's first meeting was in London, in the presence of the Commonwealth Secretary-General.[ citation needed ] The third Chair, Olusegun Obasanjo, did more to invigorate the role of the position after taking over in 2003. [2]
From the assumption of the role at the 2009 CHOGM, representatives from Trinidad and Tobago, including the Prime Ministers, attended Commonwealth meetings, including 2011 Commonwealth Day celebrations where Kamla Persad-Bissessar, the first woman to chair the Commonwealth, gave the keynote address. Sri Lanka was due to host the Commonwealth Economic Forum in 2011 but it was held instead in Perth, Western Australia, due to accusations of war crimes committed during the Sri Lankan Civil War.[ citation needed ]
As Prime Minister of Australia, Julia Gillard succeeded Persad-Bissessar as the second female Chair at the 2011 CHOGM. Julia Gillard was in-turn succeeded by Kevin Rudd after she resigned as Prime Minister of Australia on 27 June 2013. Rudd went on to lose the Australian federal election in September 2013, and consequently was succeeded as Commonwealth's CiO by the new prime minister Tony Abbott. Abbott remained in the position until Commonwealth leaders met for the 23rd time on 15 November 2013, where he was succeeded by the President of Sri Lanka Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was succeeded by Maithripala Sirisena in 2015. [3]
No. | Image | Name | Country | Title | CHOGM | Start | End | Secretary-General |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Thabo Mbeki | South Africa | President | 1999 | 12 November 1999 | 2 March 2002 | Emeka Anyaoku | |
Don McKinnon | ||||||||
2 | John Howard | Australia | Prime Minister | 2002 | 2 March 2002 | 5 December 2003 | ||
3 | Olusegun Obasanjo | Nigeria | President | 2003 | 5 December 2003 | 25 November 2005 | ||
4 | Lawrence Gonzi | Malta | Prime Minister | 2005 | 25 November 2005 | 23 November 2007 | ||
5 | Yoweri Museveni | Uganda | President | 2007 | 23 November 2007 | 27 November 2009 | ||
Kamalesh Sharma | ||||||||
6 | Patrick Manning [4] | Trinidad and Tobago | Prime Minister | 2009 | 27 November 2009 | 25 May 2010 [4] | ||
7 | Kamla Persad-Bissessar [5] | 26 May 2010 [5] | 28 October 2011 | |||||
8 | Julia Gillard | Australia | Prime Minister | 2011 | 28 October 2011 | 27 June 2013 | ||
9 | Kevin Rudd | 27 June 2013 | 18 September 2013 | |||||
10 | Tony Abbott | 18 September 2013 | 15 November 2013 | |||||
11 | Mahinda Rajapaksa | Sri Lanka | President | 2013 | 15 November 2013 | 9 January 2015 | ||
12 | Maithripala Sirisena | 9 January 2015 | 27 November 2015 | |||||
13 | Joseph Muscat | Malta | Prime Minister | 2015 | 27 November 2015 | 19 April 2018 | ||
Patricia Scotland | ||||||||
14 | Theresa May | United Kingdom | Prime Minister | 2018 | 19 April 2018 | 24 July 2019 | ||
15 | Boris Johnson | 24 July 2019 | 24 June 2022 | |||||
16 | Paul Kagame | Rwanda | President | 2022 | 24 June 2022 | Incumbent |
Trinidad and Tobago's former prime minister Patrick Manning has handed in his resignation as political leader of the People's National Movement (PNM), three days after being defeated at the polls.
The position she has inherited from former prime minister Patrick Manning following the nation's hosting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in November, 2009. In a statement issued yesterday, the Royal Commonwealth Society congratulated Persad-Bissessar on her appointment as Prime Minister and also praised the conduct of her election campaign.
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The United National Congress is one of two major political parties in Trinidad and Tobago and the current parliamentary opposition. The UNC is a centre-left party. It was founded in 1989 by Basdeo Panday, a Trinidadian lawyer, economist, trade unionist, and actor after a split in the ruling National Alliance for Reconstruction (NAR). After spending six years in opposition, the UNC won control of the government in 1995, initially in coalition with the NAR and later on its own. In the 2000 general election, the UNC won an absolute majority in the Parliament. In 2001, a split in the party caused the UNC to lose its parliamentary majority and control of the government. From 2001 to 2010, the UNC was once again Parliamentary Opposition party. In May 2010, the UNC returned to government as the majority party in the People's Partnership. The UNC's Political Leader, Kamla Persad-Bissessar, was sworn in as the first female Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago. Kamla Persad-Bissessar was Prime Minister from 2010 until 2015.
Kamla Persad-Bissessar ; born Kamla Susheila Persad, 22 April 1952), often referred to by her initials KPB, is a Trinidadian and Tobagonian lawyer, politician and educator who is the Leader of the Opposition of Trinidad and Tobago, political leader of the United National Congress (UNC) political party, and was the sixth Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago from 26 May 2010 until 9 September 2015. She was the country's first female Prime Minister, Attorney General, and Leader of the Opposition, the first woman to chair the Commonwealth of Nations and the first woman of Indian origin to be a prime minister of a country outside of India and the wider subcontinent.
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