Recean Cabinet
Appearance
Recean Cabinet | |
---|---|
Cabinet of Moldova | |
Incumbent | |
Date formed | 16 February 2023 (1 year, 268 days) |
People and organisations | |
President | Maia Sandu |
Head of government | Dorin Recean |
Deputy head of government | Mihai Popșoi Dumitru Alaiba Vladimir Bolea Cristina Gherasimov Oleg Serebrian |
No. of ministers | 14 |
Ministers removed | 8 |
Total no. of members | 18 |
Member parties | PAS Independent |
Status in legislature | Majority government 62 / 101 (61%)
|
Opposition parties | |
Opposition leaders | |
History | |
Election | 2021 |
Predecessor | Gavrilița Cabinet |
The Recean Cabinet is the Cabinet of Moldova led by former Interior Minister Dorin Recean since 16 February 2023.[1][2][3] Following an airport attack, Recean reshuffled three cabinet positions.[4][5]
The Governor of Gagauzia election in 2023, meant that Evghenia Guțul became the new governor, with a term starting on 19 July 2023.[6]
Composition
[edit]Title | Minister | Term of office | Party | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Name | Start | End | |||
Prime Minister | Dorin Recean | 16 February 2023 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Deputy Prime Minister | Nicu Popescu | 6 August 2021 | 29 January 2024 | Independent | ||
Mihai Popșoi | 29 January 2024 | Incumbent | PAS | |||
Deputy Prime Minister | Dumitru Alaiba | 16 February 2023 | Incumbent | PAS | ||
Deputy Prime Minister | Vladimir Bolea | 16 February 2023 | Incumbent | PAS | ||
Deputy Prime Minister for European Integration | Cristina Gherasimov | 5 February 2024 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Deputy Prime Minister for Reintegration | Oleg Serebrian | 19 January 2022 | Incumbent | Independent |
Title | Minister | Term of office | Party | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Name | Start | End | |||
Minister of Agriculture and Food Industry | Vladimir Bolea | 8 July 2022 | Incumbent | PAS | ||
Minister of Culture | Sergiu Prodan | 6 August 2021 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Minister of Defense | Anatolie Nosatîi | 6 August 2021 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Minister of Economic Development and Digitalization | Dumitru Alaiba | 16 November 2022 | Incumbent | PAS | ||
Minister of Education and Research | Anatolie Topală | 6 August 2021 | 14 July 2023 | Independent | ||
Dan Perciun | 17 July 2023 | Incumbent | PAS | |||
Minister of Energy | Victor Parlicov | 16 February 2023 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Minister of Environment | Rodica Iordanov | 16 November 2022 | 13 March 2024 | Independent | ||
Sergiu Lazarencu | 14 March 2024 | Incumbent | PAS | |||
Minister of Finance | Veronica Sirețeanu | 16 February 2023 | 27 September 2023 | Independent | ||
Petru Rotaru | 28 September 2023 | 31 July 2024 | ||||
Victoria Belous | 31 July 2024 | Incumbent | ||||
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Nicu Popescu | 6 August 2021 | 29 January 2024 | Independent | ||
Mihai Popșoi | 29 January 2024 | Incumbent | PAS | |||
Minister of Health | Ala Nemerenco | 6 August 2021 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Minister of Infrastructure and Regional Development | Lilia Dabija | 16 February 2023 | 14 July 2023 | Independent | ||
Andrei Spînu | 17 July 2023 | Incumbent | PAS | |||
Minister of Internal Affairs | Ana Revenco | 6 August 2021 | 14 July 2023 | Independent | ||
Adrian Efros | 17 July 2023 | Incumbent | ||||
Minister of Justice | Veronica Mihailov-Moraru | 16 February 2023 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Minister of Labour and Social Protection | Alexei Buzu | 9 January 2023 | Incumbent | Independent | ||
Governor of Gagauzia | Irina Vlah | 15 April 2015 | 19 July 2023 | Independent | ||
Evghenia Guțul | 19 July 2023 | Incumbent | Victory |
References
[edit]- ^ "Moldovan prime minister announces government resignation". Reuters. 2023-02-10. Archived from the original on 2023-02-12. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
- ^ Jardan, Cristian; McGrath, Stephen (10 February 2023). "Pro-Western Recean set to succeed Moldova's PM who resigned". Associated Press. Archived from the original on 10 February 2023. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
- ^ Jardan, Cristian; McGrath, Stephen (February 10, 2023). "Moldovan President names candidate for Prime Minister". ABC News. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 27 March 2023. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
- ^ "Moldova appoints new interior minister after airport shootout". Reuters. 2023-07-17. Retrieved 2023-08-02.
- ^ Nectusu, Madlin (2023-07-17). "Moldovan PM Reshuffles Cabinet Following Airport Gun Attack". Balkan Insight.
- ^ Alexei (2023-05-16). "Окончательные итоги голосования по второму туру выборов от 14 мая 2023 года". ЦЕНТРАЛЬНАЯ ИЗБИРАТЕЛЬНАЯ КОМИССИЯ ГАГАУЗИИ (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-11-05.