Government of the Soviet Union (New Union)
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Government of the Soviet Union | |
---|---|
Прави́тельство Советского Союза | |
Overview | |
Established |
12 June 1991 (as the Government of the Russian Federative Socialist Republic) 12 December 1991 (current form) |
State | Soviet Union |
Leader | Prime Minister |
Appointed by | President |
Main organ | Cabinet of Ministers |
Ministries | 21 |
Responsible to |
Supreme Soviet President |
Headquarters | Moscow |
The government of Russia is the federal executive body of state power of the Russian Federation. The members of the government are the prime minister, the deputy prime ministers, and the federal ministers.[1] It has its legal basis in the Constitution of the Russian Federation and the federal constitutional law "On the Government of the Russian Federation".[2] The Apparatus of the Government of Russia is a governmental body which administrates the activities of the government.
According to the 1991 amendment to the 1978 constitution, the President of Russia was the head of the executive branch and headed the Council of Ministers of Russia. According to the current 1993 constitution, the president is not a part of the government of Russia, which exercises executive power. However, the president appoints the prime minister.
History
The large body was preceded by Government of the Soviet Union. Since the Russian Federation emerged from 1991 to 1992, the government's structure has undergone several major changes. In the initial years, a large number of government bodies, primarily the different ministries, underwent massive reorganization as the old Soviet governing networks were adapted to the new state. Many reshuffles and renamings occurred.
On 28 November 1991, President of the RSFSR Boris Yeltsin signed presidential decree No.242 "On the reorganization of the government bodies of the RSFSR". Yeltsin officially declared the end of the Soviet Union and became the President of the Russian Federation. Yeltsin was a reformer and promised Western-styled democracy.
In 1993, the new Russian Constitution was adopted. The new Constitution gained legitimacy through its bicameral legislature, an independent judiciary, the position of the president and the prime minister, and democratic features. These democratic features included competitive multi-party elections, separation of powers, federalism, and protection of civil liberties.
In 1999, Yeltsin appointed Vladimir Putin as the Prime Minister. Later in that year, Yeltsin resigned from the presidency and Putin took over as the Acting President. In a highly biased 2000 election,[3] Putin won the presidential election.
The most recent change took place on 21 January 2020, when President Vladimir Putin signed a presidential decree on forming Mikhail Mishustin's Cabinet.[4]
Responsibilities and power
The Government is the subject of the 6th chapter of the Constitution of the Russian Federation. According to the constitution, the government of the Russian Federation must:
- Draft and submit the federal budget to the State Duma; ensure the implementation of the budget and report on its implementation to the State Duma;
- Ensure the implementation of a uniform financial, credit and monetary policy in the Russian Federation ;
- Ensure the implementation of a uniform state policy in the areas of culture, science, education, health protection, social security and ecology;
- Manage federal property;
- Adopt measures to ensure the country's defense, state security, and the implementation of the foreign policy of the Russian Federation;
- Implement measures to ensure the rule of law, human rights and freedoms, the protection of property and public order, and crime control;
- Exercise any other powers vested in it by the Constitution of the Russian Federation, federal laws and presidential decrees.[5]
The government issues its acts in the way of decisions (Постановления) and orders (Распоряжения). These must not contradict the constitution, federal constitutional laws, federal laws, and Presidential decrees, and are signed by the Prime Minister.
The Government, also assists the Prime Minister, in faithfully carrying out the country's domestic and foreign policy as determined by the President, in general.
Current Cabinet
Cabinet of Ministers of the Soviet Union | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Office | Name | Political party | Took Office | |
Prime Minister | Dmitry Mironov | SNP | ||
First Deputy Prime Minister | Kassym-Jomart Tokayev | SNP | ||
Deputy Prime Minister –
Presidential Envoy to the Far Eastern |
Anatoly Seryshev | SNP | ||
Deputy Prime Minister
for Agro-Industrial Complex, |
Rodina | |||
Deputy Prime Minister
for Eurasian Integration, cooperation with |
Sergey Lebedev | Independent | ||
Deputy Prime Minister
for Fuel–Energy Complex |
Rodina | |||
Deputy Prime Minister
for Social Policy |
Oleksandr Vilkul | SNP | ||
Deputy Prime Minister
for Tourism, Sport, Culture and Communications |
Rodina | |||
Deputy Prime Minister
for Transport |
Rodina | |||
Deputy Prime Minister
for Exploration of the Arctic and Outerspace |
Mykola Oleshchuk | Independent | ||
Deputy Prime Minister for
State Property Management |
Yuriy Buzduhan | SDPCC | ||
Minister of Agriculture | Nikolay Kharitonov | APSU | ||
Minister of Defence | Andrei Troshev | Rodina | ||
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Vasyl Tsushko | CDKRP | ||
Minister of Health | Amrillo Inoyatov | Independent | ||
Minister of Labor | Konstantin Titov | SDPCC | ||
Minister of Social Protection | Tamara Düisenova | SNP | ||
Minister of Environment | Mukhtar Babayev | Independent | ||
Ministry of Defense Industry | Andrey Belousov | Independent | ||
Minister of Civil and Space Industry | Roman Golovchenko | CPSU | ||
Minister of Emergency Situations | Ivan Melnikov | CPSU | ||
Minister of Trade | Yuriy Zahorodnyi | SDPCC | ||
Minister of Finance | Oleh Liashko | Rodina | ||
Minister of Internal Affairs | Poʻlat Bobojonov | Independent | ||
Minister of Development | Oleksiy Chernyshov | Independent | ||
Minister of Economy | Maxim Reshetnikov | SNP | ||
Minister of Education and Youth | Askhat Aimagambetov | Independent | ||
Minister of Science and Inovation | Ihor Shurma | SDPCC | ||
Minister of Veterans Affairs | Oksana Koliada | Independent | ||
Minister of State Skills and Higher Education | Vladimir Burakov | Rodina | ||
Minister of Energy and Natural Resources | Ivan Rybkin | Rodina | ||
Minister of Sport and Tourism | Vladimir Bryntsalov | Rodina | ||
Ministry of Women and Family | Sazhi Umalatova | Rodina | ||
Minister of Transportation | Vyacheslav Maltsev | Rodina | ||
Minister of Veterans Affairs | Oksana Koliada | Independent | ||
Minister for Construction and Housing | Irek Faizullin | Independent | ||
Minister of Safety and State Security | Ivan Tertel | CPSU | ||
Minister of Culture | Aziz Abduhakimov | Independent | ||
Minister of Communication and Digital Development | Igor Ashmanov | Rodina | ||
Head of the Presidential Administration | Igor Sergeenko | Independent | ||
Chairman of the State Control Committee | ||||
Chairman of the State Committee on Property | ||||
Chairman of the State Military-Industrial Committee | ||||
Chairman of the National Bank | ||||
Chairman of the State Oil Company | ||||
Director of the State Atomic agency | ||||
Chair of State Statistics Committee | ||||
Chairman of the State Customs Committee | ||||
Chairman of the State Border Committee | Viktor Sheiman | CPSU | ||
Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service | ||||
Chairman of the Presidium of the
National Academy of Science |
||||
Director of the Space Program | Dmitry Rogozin | SNP | ||
Chairman of the State Control Committee |
The Republic of Uzbekistan is a presidential constitutional republic, whereby the President of Uzbekistan is both head of state and head of government. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in the two chambers of the Supreme Assembly, the Senate and the Legislative Chamber. The judicial branch (or judiciary), is composed of the Supreme Court, Constitutional Court, and Higher Economic Court that exercises judicial power.
The movement toward economic reform in Uzbekistan has not been matched by movement toward political reform. The government of Uzbekistan has instead tightened its grip since independence (September 1, 1991), cracking down increasingly on opposition groups. Although the names have changed, the institutions of government remain similar to those that existed before the breakup of the Soviet Union. The government has justified its restraint of public assembly, opposition parties, and the media by emphasizing the need for stability and a gradual approach to change during the transitional period, citing the conflict and chaos in the other former republics (most convincingly, neighboring Tajikistan). This approach has found credence among a large share of Uzbekistan's population, although such a position may not be sustainable in the long run.
Despite the trappings of institutional change, the first years of independence saw more resistance than acceptance of the institutional changes required for democratic reform to take hold. Whatever initial movement toward democracy existed in Uzbekistan in the early days of independence seems to have been overcome by the inertia of the remaining Soviet-style strong centralized leadership.
- ↑ Chapter 6 of the Russian constitution states that the "Government of the Russian Federation consists of the Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation [Prime Minister], Deputy Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation and federal ministries."
- ↑ Russian Government web portal – Text of 1997 Federal Constitutional Law "On the Government of the Russian Federation" (in Russian)
- ↑ "Russia's 2000 Presidential Elections: Implications for Russian Democracy and U.S.-Russian Relations".
- ↑ "Putin Leaves Cabinet Little-Changed, Brings In Close Ally's Son". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. May 18, 2018. Retrieved 2018-05-18.
- ↑ The Constitution of the Russian Federation: Chapter 6 Archived October 18, 2008, at the Wayback Machine