Council of Ministers of Poland
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| Poland Image:Herb Polski.png |
| Constitution |
| President-elect: Lech Kaczyński |
| Prime Minister: Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz Council of Ministers Ministries |
| Law Supreme Court Constitutional Tribunal State Tribunal Supreme Administrative Court Supreme Chamber of Control Attorney General Ombudsman |
| Political Parties: LPR PD PiS PO PSL SDPL SLD SRP UP |
| Elections Presidential (after 1989): 1990 1995 2000 2005 Parliamentary (after 1989): 1989 1991 1993 1997 2001 2005 European Parliament: 2004 Polish referenda Local elections |
| See also Economy Foreign relations History Military |
The Council of Ministers (cabinet), or Polish government, consists of ministers, heads of departments of ministerial rank, and heads of central institutions. The Council of Ministers is the body which exercises executive power. Under the Public Administration Branches Act the Prime Minister, who heads the Council of Ministers, enjoys a considerable degree of freedom in decisions concerning its personnel.
The Prime Minister may create, combine, or dissolve departments, change their area of responsibility, and even apply to the President to expand the Council of Ministers to include ministers without portfolio, or coordinators for projects performed by the Council of Ministers, e.g. reform of the educational system or health service.
The chairpersons of certain committees specified in the legislation (e.g. the European Integration Committee), may also be appointed to the Council of Ministers. The composition of the Council of Ministers is proposed by the Prime Minister, who lodges an application to the President of the Republic for the appointment of cabinet members. The President appoints the Council of Ministers and receives their oath "of loyalty to the Constitution and other laws of the Republic of Poland".
Currently, the Council of Ministers consists of 18 members:
- Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz - Prime Minister
- Ludwik Dorn - Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Interior and Administration
- Grażyna Gęsicka - Minister of Regional Development
- Krzysztof Jurgiel - Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development
- Tomasz Lipiec - Minister of Sport
- Teresa Lubińska - Minister of Finance
- Stefan Meller - Minister of Foreign Affairs
- Krzysztof Michałkiewicz - Minister of Labour and Social Policy
- Andrzej Mikosz - Minister of State Treasury
- Jerzy Polaczek - Minister of Transport and Construction
- Zbigniew Religa - Minister of Health
- Michał Seweryński - Minister of Education and Science
- Radosław Sikorski - Minister of National Defence
- Jan Szyszko - Minister of Environment
- Kazimierz Michał Ujazdowski - Minister of Culture and National Heritage
- Zbigniew Wassermann - Minister, Member of the Council of Ministers
- Piotr Grzegorz Woźniak - Minister of Economy
- Zbigniew Ziobro - Minister of Justice
The Council of Ministers also manages the current policy of state, ensures the execution of the law by issuing ordinances, coordinates and controls the work of government administrative bodies, ensures public order and the internal and external security of the state, protects the interests of the State Treasury, approves the draft of the budget, and supervises its execution. The Council of Ministers also signs international agreements which require ratification, and can revoke other international agreements.
Members of the Council of Ministers are jointly responsible to Sejm for the operation of the government; they can also be individually responsible for the tasks entrusted to them by the Prime Minister or falling within the authority of their ministries. Any breach of the law or crime related to the offices they hold carry the risk of trial before the State Tribunal, a special court appointed by Sejm, in which members of Sejm act as judges. The Council of Ministers is represented in the different voivodships of the country by its voivodes or regional governors. There are 16 of them - one for each voivodeship. The voivodes supervise the state administration within the territory of their voivodeship. The officials subordinate to the voivodes, as well as those working in the central offices and ministries, constitute the civil service corps, a politically independent body or administrators. The civil service corps is headed by the Prime Minister.
Alongside the civil service corps, the Chancellery of the Prime Minister and all ministries entail political cabinets - teams of advisors working for the government and each ministry on detailed policy guidelines.pl:Rada Ministrów
