Prentice ministry explained

Cabinet Name:Prentice Ministry
Cabinet Type:ministry
Cabinet Number:16th
Jurisdiction:Alberta
Flag:Flag of Alberta.svg
Flag Border:true
Government Head Title:Premier
Government Head:Jim Prentice
State Head Title:Monarch
State Head:Elizabeth II
Represented By Title:Lieutenant Governor
Represented By:Donald Ethell
Political Party:Progressive Conservative
Opposition Party:Wildrose Party
Opposition Leader:
Legislature Term:28th Alberta Legislature
Legislature Status:Majority
Predecessor:Hancock Ministry
Successor:Notley Ministry

The Prentice Ministry was the combined Cabinet (called Executive Council of Alberta), chaired by 16th Premier of Alberta Jim Prentice, that governed Alberta from September 15, 2014 to May 24, 2015. It was made up of members of the Progressive Conservative Party (PC).

Cabinet composition and shuffles

Prentice's cabinet was sworn in on September 15, 2014.[1] At 16 ministers and three associate ministers, it was significantly smaller than the Redford Ministry, which numbered 19 ministers and 10 assosciate ministers.[2] Prentice took two portfolios himself: international and intergovernmental relations and aboriginal relations. Prentice dropped several high-profile ministers from cabinet, such as Doug Horner and Fred Horne, and brought in six new members: Gordon Dirks, David Dorward, Stephen Khan, Maureen Kubinec, Stephen Mandel and Ric McIver. Dirks, a former Calgary school board chair, and Mandel, former mayor of Edmonton, were not MLAs at the time of their appointment, becoming the first unelected cabinet ministers in Alberta since the 1930s. Prentice defended their appointments, saying "bringing in new government means bringing in new blood", and stressed that they would run in by-elections before the legislature resumed.[3] Of the ten cabinet ministers who were held over from the Hancock and Redford ministries, six were moved to new portfolios and four — Naresh Bhardwaj, Jonathan Denis, Wayne Drysdale and Verlyn Olson — stayed put.

On April 25, 2015, in the middle of the 2015 Alberta general election, Jonathan Denis resigned as justice minister due to "legal proceedings" against him by his estranged wife. Prentice asked for Denis' resignation due to the involvement of the courts. Agriculture minister Verlyn Olson took over the justice portfolio in an acting capacity.[4]

List of ministers

NameDate AppointedDate Departed
Jim PrenticePresident of the Executive Council (Premier)September 15, 2014May 24, 2015
Robin CampbellPresident of Treasury Board and Minister of FinanceSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Jim PrenticeMinister of Aboriginal RelationsSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Maureen KubinecMinister of Culture and TourismSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Gordon DirksMinister of EducationSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Frank Oberle Jr.Minister of EnergySeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Kyle FawcettMinister of Environment and Sustainable Resource DevelopmentSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Stephen MandelMinister of HealthSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Heather KlimchukMinister of Human ServicesSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Manmeet BhullarMinister of InfrastructureSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Don ScottMinister of Innovation and Advanced EducationSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Jim PrenticeMinister of International and Intergovernmental RelationsSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Ric McIverMinister of Jobs, Skills, Training and LabourSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Jonathan DenisMinister of Justice and Solicitor GeneralMay 8, 2012April 25, 2015
Diana McQueenMinister of Municipal AffairsSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Jeff JohnsonMinister of SeniorsSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Stephen KhanMinister of Service AlbertaSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
David DorwardAssociate Minister of Aboriginal RelationsSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015
Everett McDonaldAssociate Minister of Agriculture and Rural DevelopmentMarch 17, 2015May 23, 2015
Teresa Woo-PawAssociate Minister of Asia Pacific RelationsSeptember 15, 2014May 23, 2015

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parrish . Julia . 2014-09-15 . Jim Prentice’s new cabinet unveiled . 2022-07-23 . Edmonton . en.
  2. Web site: Alberta reacts to Premier Prentice’s new cabinet Globalnews.ca . 2022-07-23 . Global News . en-US.
  3. Web site: Mertz . Emily . September 15, 2014 . Jim Prentice’s cabinet: Who’s in and who’s out? Globalnews.ca . 2022-07-23 . Global News . en-US.
  4. News: April 25, 2015 . Jonathan Denis resigns as justice minister amid 'legal proceedings' . . July 23, 2022.