Ministry of the Presidency (Bolivia) explained

Agency Name:Ministry of the Presidency
Preceding1:General Secretariat of the Presidency
Agency Type:Ministry
Jurisdiction:Government of Bolivia
Headquarters:Casa Grande del Pueblo
Central Zone, Ayacucho Street - esq. Potosí,
La Paz, Bolivia
Coordinates:-16.4958°N -68.1336°W
Chief1 Name:María Nela Prada
Chief1 Position:Minister
Child1 Agency:Vice Ministry of Coordination and Government Management
Child2 Agency:Vice Ministry of Coordination with Social Movements and Civil Society
Child3 Agency:Vice Ministry of Autonomies
Child4 Agency:Vice Ministry of Communication

The Ministry of the Presidency (Spanish; Castilian: Ministerio de la Presidencia) is the department of the Government of Bolivia that provides support to the presidential administration by coordinating its political-administrative actions with the different ministries as well as the legislative, judicial, and electoral branches of government in addition to social sectors and cooperatives. Aside from these tasks, the ministry acts as the chief custodian of the government, filing all laws, decrees, and resolutions and publishing them in the Official Gazette of Bolivia.[1]

Established on 6 August 1989 by Presidential Decree N° 22292 issued by President Jaime Paz Zamora, the office was previously known as the General Secretariat of the Presidency.[2] The first official under the newly elevated ministry was Gustavo Fernández Saavedra, appointed on the same day.

Administration

María Nela Prada is the incumbent minister, appointed on 9 November 2020. The minister is charged with the appointment of four vice ministers. The current incumbents are: Freddy Bobaryn, Juan Villca, Álvaro Ruiz García, and Gabriela Alcón.

PortfolioMinisterPartyTook officeTerm
Minister of the PresidencyMaría Nela PradaMASDip.9 November 2020[3] [4]
Vice Minister of Coordination
and Government Management
Freddy BobarynMASPoli.13 November 2020[5] [6]
Vice Minister of Coordination with
Social Movements and Civil Society
Juan VillcaMASUni.12 November 2020[7] [8]
Vice Minister of AutonomiesÁlvaro Ruiz GarcíaMASLaw.14 May 2021[9] [10]
Vice Minister of CommunicationGabriela AlcónMASJrnl.12 November 2020[11] [12]

Organization

Source:[13]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Misión y visión. 2021-11-18. presidencia.gob.bo. es.
  2. Web site: 1989-08-06. Decreto Presidencial N° 22292. 2021-11-18. Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia. es.
  3. Web site: 2020-11-09. Decreto Presidencial N° 4389. 2021-11-10. Gaceta Oficial del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia. es.
  4. News: Claros. Yandira. 2020-11-09. María Nela Prada, la primera mujer que es ministra de la Presidencia. es. La Razón. 2021-11-10.
  5. Web site: 2020-11-13. Freddy Bobaryn es posesionado como nuevo viceministro de Gestión y Coordinación Gubernamental. 2021-11-10. comunicacion.gob.bo. es.
  6. Web site: Viceministro de Coordinación y Gestión Gubernamental Freddy Bobaryn López. 2021-11-10. presidencia.gob.bo. es.
  7. Web site: 2020-11-12. Se posesionan viceministros de Coordinación con Movimientos Sociales y de Comunicación. 2021-11-10. comunicacion.gob.bo. es.
  8. News: 2020-11-12. Juan Villca, nuevo viceministro de Coordinación con Movimientos Sociales. es. Página Siete. 2021-11-10.
  9. News: 2021-05-13. David Pérez Rapu renuncia al cargo de viceministro de Autonomías. es. eju.tv. 2021-11-10.
  10. Web site: 2021-05-14. Ministra de la Presidencia posesiona a Álvaro Ruiz García como nuevo Viceministro de Autonomías. 2021-11-10. presidencia.gob.bo. es.
  11. Web site: Viceministra de Comunicación Gabriela Alcón. 2021-11-10. presidencia.gob.bo. es.
  12. News: 2020-11-12. Gabriela Alcón es nombrada viceministra de Comunicación. es. Página Siete. 2021-11-10.
  13. Web site: Organigrama de la institución. 2021-11-18. presidencia.gob.bo. es.