Basque Government Explained

Government Name:Basque Government
Nativename:Basque: Eusko Jaurlaritza
Spanish; Castilian: Gobierno Vasco
Date Established:Consejo General Vasco (1978-80)
Gobierno de Euzkadi (1936-79)
Polity:Basque Country
Leader Title:Lehendakari
Responsible:Basque Parliament
Appointed:King of Spain
Address:Vitoria-Gasteiz
Budget:€11.75 billion (2020)

The Basque Government (Basque: Eusko Jaurlaritza, Spanish; Castilian: Gobierno Vasco) is the governing body of the Basque Autonomous Community of Spain. The head of the Basque government is known as the Lehendakari. The Lehendakari is appointed by the Basque Parliament every four years, after a regional election. Its headquarters are located in the Lakua district of Vitoria-Gasteiz in Álava.

The first Basque Government was created after the approval of the first Basque Statute of Autonomy on 1 October 1936, in the midst of the Spanish Civil War. It was headed by José Antonio Aguirre (EAJ-PNV) and was supported by a coalition of all the parties that fought the Nationalist forces in the Civil War: those comprising the Popular Front (PSOE, PCE, EAE-ANV and other parties that sided with the Second Spanish Republic). After the defeat of the Republic, the Basque Government survived in exile, chaired by Jesús María Leizaola after the death of Aguirre in 1960. This first Basque Government was formally disbanded after the approval of the current Statute of Autonomy in 1979, after the death of caudillo Francisco Franco.

Upon approval of the new Statute, the new Basque Government was created (1980), superseding the Basque General Council. Carlos Garaikoetxea was the first lehendakari of the new Government.

Current composition

See main article: Government of Imanol Pradales. During the current legislative term, the Basque Government is chaired by Imanol Pradales, member of the Basque Nationalist Party, thanks to a government agreement with the Basque Socialist Party-Basque Left Party (PSE-EE). Urkullu got the back up of 39 parliamentarians (27 from the PNV and 12 from the PSE-EE) in his inauguration speech that took place in June 2024.

The composition of the Basque Government is established by the President of the Basque Country, also referred in Euskera as Lehendakari, who selects the counselors that will lead each of the Government departments. During the current legislative term the Government is compounded by fifteen departments: Culture and Language Policy; Economy, Labour and Employment; Treasury and Finance; Governance, Digital Administration and Self-Government; Industry, Energy Transition and Sustainability; Security; Education; Housing and Urban Agenda; Health; Welfare, Youth and the Demographic Challenge; Sustainable Mobility; Science, Universities and Innovation; Tourism, Trade and Consumer Affairs; Food, Rural Development, Agriculture and Fisheries; and Justice and Human Rights.[1] It has 78,000 employees.[2] [3]

List of powers

Power held by the Basque country include but are not limited to:

Politics, bureaucracy and justice

Finance

Industry

Infrastructure

Health and social

Education

Culture

Historic administrations

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. 24 June 2024 . DDECRETO 18/2024, de 23 de junio, del Lehendakari, de creación, supresión y modificación de los Departamentos de la Administración General de la Comunidad Autónoma del País Vasco y de determinación de funciones y áreas de actuación de los mismos. . es . 123 . 3015 . 2483-5374.
  2. Web site: Boletín Estadístico del personal al servicio de las Administraciones Públicas. Julio 2011 . Statistical Bulletin of the personnel at the service of the Public Administrations. July 2011 . 2013-02-19 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121126080209/http://www.seap.minhap.gob.es/dms/es/servicios/empleo_publico/boletin/boletin/Bol_estad_pers-juli11-INTERNET . 2012-11-26 .
  3. Web site: Personal medio empleado en las administraciones públicas vascas por tipo de administración. 2016-2019 . Average personnel employed in the Basque public administrations by type of administration. 2016-2019 . www.eustat.es . 22 December 2020 . 22 May 2021.
  4. Web site: 2004-07-16 . The statue of autonomy of the Basque Country . 2024-01-20 . www.euskadi.eus . en.