Government of Ontario explained

Background Color:
  1. 24135f
Border:provincial
Government Name:Government of Ontario
State:Ontario
Country:Canada
Leader Title:Premier
Doug Ford
Appointed:Lieutenant Governor
Edith Dumont
Main Organ:Executive Council
Responsible:Legislative Assembly
Address:Toronto

The Government of Ontario (French: Gouvernement de l'Ontario) is the body responsible for the administration of the Canadian province of Ontario. The term Government of Ontario refers specifically to the executive—political ministers of the Crown (the Cabinet/Executive Council), appointed on the advice of the premier, and the non-partisan Ontario Public Service (whom the Executive Council directs), who staff ministries and agencies to deliver government policies, programs, and services—which corporately brands itself as the Government of Ontario, or more formally, His Majesty's Government of Ontario (French: Gouvernement de l’Ontario de Sa Majesté).[1]

Role of the Crown

See main article: Monarchy of Canada and Monarchy in Ontario.

See also: Monarchy in the Canadian provinces., as monarch of Canada is also the King in Right of Ontario. As a Commonwealth realm, the Canadian monarch is shared with 14 other independent countries within the Commonwealth of Nations. Within Canada, the monarch exercises power individually on behalf of the federal government, and the 10 provinces.

Lieutenant governor

See main article: Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. The powers of the Crown are vested in the monarch and are exercised by the lieutenant governor. The advice of the premier and Executive Council is typically binding; the Constitution Act, 1867 requires executive power to be exercised only "by and with the Advice of the Executive Council".[2]

The lieutenant governor is appointed by the governor general, on the advice of the prime minister of Canada. Thus, it is typically the lieutenant governor whom the premier and ministers advise, exercising much of the royal prerogative and granting royal assent.

While the advice of the premier and Executive Council is typically binding on the lieutenant governor, there are occasions when the lieutenant governor has refused advice. This usually occurs if the premier does not clearly command the confidence of the elected Legislative Assembly.

King-in-Council

The executive power is vested in the Crown and exercised "in-Council", meaning on the advice of the Executive Council; conventionally, this is the Cabinet, which is chaired by the premier and comprises ministers of the Crown.

Premier and Executive Council

The term Government of Ontario, or more formally, Majesty's Government refers to the activities of the Lieutenant Governor-in-Council. The day-to-day operation and activities of the Government of Ontario are performed by the provincial departments and agencies, staffed by the non-partisan Ontario Public Service and directed by the elected government.

Premier

See main article: Premier of Ontario. The premier of Ontario is the first minister of the Crown. The premier acts as the head of government for the province, chairs and selects the membership of the Cabinet, and advises the Crown on the exercise of executive power and much of the royal prerogative. As premiers hold office by virtue of their ability to command the confidence of the elected Legislative Assembly, they typically sit as a MPP and lead the largest party or a coalition in the Assembly. Once sworn in, the premier holds office until their resignation or removal by the lieutenant governor after either a motion of no confidence or defeat in a general election.

In Canada, the Cabinet of provincial and territorial governments are known as an Executive Council .

The premier of Ontario is Doug Ford of the Progressive Conservatives since the 2018 election; the 26th since Confederation.

Cabinet membership

See also: Executive Council of Ontario.

MinistryMinisterAssumed present office
Cabinet OfficeDoug Ford (Premier)June 29, 2018
Sylvia Jones (Deputy Premier)June 24, 2022
Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural AffairsLisa ThompsonJune 18, 2021
Ministry of the Attorney GeneralDoug Downey (Attorney General)June 20, 2019
Ministry of Children, Community and Social ServicesMichael ParsaMarch 24, 2023
Charmaine Williams (Associate Minister of Women's Social and Economic Opportunity)June 24, 2022
Ministry of Citizenship and MulticulturalismMichael FordJune 24, 2022
Ministry of Colleges and UniversitiesNolan QuinnJune 18, 2021
Ministry of Economic Development, Job Creation and TradeVic FedeliJune 20, 2019
Nina Tangri (Associate Minister of Small Business)[3] September 22, 2023
Ministry of EducationJill DunlopJune 20, 2019
Ministry of EnergySteven LecceJune 18, 2021
Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and ParksAndrea KhanjinSeptember 22, 2023
Ministry of FinancePeter BethlenfalvyDecember 31, 2020
Ministry of Francophone AffairsCaroline MulroneyJune 29, 2018
Ministry of HealthSylvia JonesJune 24, 2022
Michael Tibollo (Associate Minister of Mental Health and Addictions)June 20, 2019
Ministry of Indigenous AffairsGreg RickfordJune 29, 2018
Ministry of InfrastructureKinga SurmaJune 18, 2021
Ministry of Intergovernmental AffairsDoug FordJune 29, 2018
Ministry of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills DevelopmentDavid PicciniSeptember 22, 2023
Ministry of Legislative AffairsPaul CalandraOctober 19, 2021
Ministry of Long-Term CareStan ChoSeptember 4, 2023
Ministry of MinesGeorge PirieJune 24, 2022
Ministry of Municipal Affairs and HousingPaul CalandraSeptember 4, 2023
Rob Flack (Associate Minister of Housing)September 4, 2023
Ministry of Natural Resources and ForestryGraydon SmithJune 24, 2022
Ministry of Northern DevelopmentGreg RickfordJune 24, 2022
Ministry of Public and Business Service DeliveryTodd McCarthySeptember 4, 2023
Ministry of Red Tape ReductionParm GillJune 24, 2022
Ministry of Seniors and AccessibilityRaymond ChoJune 29, 2018
Ministry of the Solicitor GeneralMichael Kerzner (Solicitor General)June 24, 2022
Ministry of Tourism, Culture and SportNeil LumsdenJune 24, 2022
Ministry of TransportationPrabmeet SarkariaSeptember 4, 2023
Vijay ThanigasalamSeptember 22, 2023
Treasury BoardCaroline Mulroney (President of the Treasury Board)September 4, 2023

Crown corporations

Ontario Public Service

The Government of Ontario employs 63,000+ public servants in its non-partisan workforce called the Ontario Public Service (OPS).[4] The OPS helps the government design and deliver policies and programs. The head of the OPS is the Secretary of Cabinet and each ministry in the OPS has a Deputy Minister. The OPS public servants work in areas like administration, communications, data analytics, finance, information technology, law, policy, program development, service delivery, science and research.[5]

Over 80% of the OPS workforce is unionized, which includes the Ontario Public Service Employees Union and the Association of Management, Administrative and Professional Crown Employees of Ontario.[6]

Public servants who are paid $100,000 or more are subject to the Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act.[7] This list is colloquially known as the sunshine list.

See also

References

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Order in Council 174/2019. live. 2021-03-28. www.ontario.ca. 16 July 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220716233013/https://www.ontario.ca/orders-in-council/oc-1742019.
  2. Web site: Branch. Legislative Services. 2020-08-07. Consolidated federal laws of canada, THE CONSTITUTION ACTS, 1867 to 1982. 2021-04-03. laws-lois.justice.gc.ca. 5 June 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220605145518/https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/const/page-2.html#h-11. live.
  3. Web site: Premier Doug Ford Renews Team that will Deliver on Promise to Build Ontario .
  4. Web site: Senior leadership diversification in the Ontario Public Service – 2020 annual progress report ontario.ca . 2023-08-04 . www.ontario.ca . en.
  5. Web site: About the Ontario Public Service ontario.ca . 2023-08-04 . www.ontario.ca . en.
  6. Web site: OPS workforce demographics - Dataset - Ontario Data Catalogue . 2023-08-04 . data.ontario.ca.
  7. Web site: Public sector salary disclosure 2022: all sectors and seconded employees . 2023-08-05 . www.ontario.ca.