Cabinet of Taijitu

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Cabinet of Taijitu
Seal of the Delegate of Taijitu
History
Formation Constitution of Taijitu
June 20, 2010
Leadership
Delegate Myroria
Structure
Ministries Ministry of Community
Ministry of Defense
Ministry of External Affairs
Ministry of Internal Affairs
Ministry of Justice
Members Myroria
     Inglo-Scotia
     The Crazy Monkeymen
     St Oz
Political groups      Taijitu Nationalist Alliance

     Independent

Selection
Method Delegate appointment
Term length Indefinite
Meeting place
Executive forums

The Cabinet of Taijitu is the body responsible for assisting the Delegate in administering Taijitu's government. It is primarily composed of a number of ministers appointed by the Delegate, though is also considered to formally include the Delegate themselves and the Lieutenant Delegate. The ministers of the Cabinet are responsible for running certain ministries responsible for different executive functions. These ministries are regulated by the Ministries Act. There is no limit on how long a minister may serve, but they may be removed by the Delegate or a vote of the Senate.

History

The Cabinet as originally established by the first constitution of Taijitu favored the executive. Ministers required a two-thirds super-majority vote of the Senate to be removed, instead of a simple majority, and the Senate had no power to compel the creation of certain ministries. This was soon changed by a constitutional amendment on April 16, 2007, which gave the Senate the power to create ministries by law and remove ministers by a simple majority vote.

On March 23, 2008, a coup was used to forcibly instate a new constitution, which gave the Delegate unprecedented powers over the Cabinet. The Senate's legislative replacement, the Citizen's Assembly, was not only unable to create ministries by law, but also unable to remove ministers from office. This constitution, however, was short lived, and the Senate and its controls over the Cabinet were restored in full later later that year by a new constitution.

During a convention to create a new constitution in May of 2010, it was decided to keep the Cabinet as it was under the previous Constitution. This decision was affirmed on June 20 when the new constitution was formally ratified. Under it the Ministries Act was signed into law on August 2 of the same year, defining the ministries of the Cabinet.

Responsibilities

The Cabinet's sole responsibility is to assist the Delegate in administering their duties. This covers a wide range of disparate tasks. Some of these are explicitly mandated in in the Constitution, such as processing citizenship applications. Others are established by law or executive decree, such as recruiting new nations. In either case, which duties the Cabinet is responsible for, and which ministers are responsible for which duties is decided by the Delegate. For some ministries the Delegate's expectations are formalized in the form of written directives while others are operated on an ad hoc basis.

Ministries

Ministry Minister In office since

Appointment and removal

Ministers are appointed by the Delegate and do not require Senate confirmation to take office. Once appointed, ministers serve indefinitely until their resignation or removal from office, and it is not unheard of for ministers to outlast the delegates who appointed them. They may be removed at the discretion of the Delegate, or by a majority vote of the Senate. Because ministers are unelected, they may not be recalled in a referendum.

See also