Post: | Vice President |
Body: | the Gabonese Republic |
Native Name: | French: Vice-président de la<br>République gabonaise |
Insignia: | Coat of arms of Gabon.svg |
Insigniasize: | 125px |
Insigniacaption: | Coat of arms of Gabon |
Incumbent: | Joseph Owondault Berre (Transitional) |
Incumbentsince: | 11 September 2023 |
Appointer: | President of Gabon |
Formation: | February 1961 |
First: | Paul-Marie Yembit |
The vice president of Gabon (French: Vice-président du Gabon) is a political position in Gabon. The vice president's role is to assist the president and the person serving as vice president has no interim role in the event of a power vacuum.
Joseph Owondault Berre is the current transitional vice president appointed by transitional president Brice Oligui after the 2023 coup d'état.[1]
Changes in the Constitution of 1966 made the vice president the automatic successor of the president in case of a vacancy in the latter office.[2] Albert-Bernard Bongo was appointed as vice president in 1966 with the expectation that he would constitutionally succeed the ailing president Leon M'ba, and he did so following M'ba's death in November 1967. In April 1975 the position of vice president was abolished and its functions were given to the Prime Minister.[2]
The position of vice president was restored in 1997 as a position appointed by the president of Gabon. The vice president acted as the president's deputy, but was not the constitutional successor of the president in the event of a vacancy in the latter office. President Ali Bongo abolished the office in October 2009.[2]
The president of the republic is assisted by a vice president of the republic.[3]
The vice president of the republic is nominated by the president of the republic, who can terminate his or her duties, after the consultation of the presidents of the two chambers of Parliament of Gabon. The vice president of the republic may be chosen from the members of Parliament, or outside the legislature.
The functions of the vice president of the republic are incompatible with the exercise of all other public and private functions of a lucrative character.[4]
The vice president of the republic takes the oath of office before the president of the republic and in the presence of the Constitutional Court, according to the terms below:[5]
The vice president of the republic stands in for the president of the republic in the duties that the president delegates to him.[6]
The manner in which the present article may be applied is fixed by an organic law.
The functions of the vice president of the republic end at the issuing of the proclamation of the next presidential election results by the Constitutional Court and in the case of a vacancy in the presidential office for whatever reason, or a permanent impairment of the current president of the republic.[7]
The vice president of the republic is a member of the Council of Ministers by right. If appropriate, the vice president may substitute the president of the republic through express authorization and a defined order of business.[8]
Portrait | Name | Term of office | Political party | President(s) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Time in office | ||||||
1 | Paul-Marie Yembit | 1961 | 1966 | BDG | M'ba | |||
2 | Albert-Bernard Bongo [9] | 1966 | 1967 | BDG | M'ba | |||
3 | Léon Mébiame | 1968 | 1975 | 7 years | PDG | O. Bongo | ||
Post abolished (April 1975–May 1997) | ||||||||
4 | Didjob Divungi Di Ndinge | 1997 | 2009 | O. Bongo Himself Rogombé | ||||
Post abolished (October 2009–August 2017) | ||||||||
5 | Pierre Claver Maganga Moussavou | 2017[10] | 21 May 2019 | PSD | A. Bongo | |||
Post abolished (21 May 2019 – 9 January 2023) | ||||||||
6 | Rose Christiane Raponda[11] [12] | 2023 | 2023 | PDG | A. Bongo | |||
— | Joseph Owondault Berre[13] | 2023 | Incumbent | Independent | Oligui |