Prime Minister of Morocco

The Prime Minister of Morocco (officially Head of Government) is the head of government of the Kingdom of Morocco and serves in a position akin to a prime minister in other constitutional monarchies.[2] The Prime Minister is chosen by the king of Morocco from the largest party elected to parliament. The Constitution of Morocco grants executive powers to the government and allows the head of government to propose and dismiss cabinet members, provincial governors, and ambassadors, to oversee government programs and the delivery of public services, and to dissolve the lower house of parliament with the king's approval.[3]

Head of Government of the Kingdom of Morocco
رئيس حكومة المملكة المغربية
Coat of Arms of Morocco
Incumbent
Saadeddine Othmani

since 17 March 2017
AppointerMohammed VI
Inaugural holderMbarek Bekkay
Formation7 December 1955 (1955-12-07)
Salary62,500 USD annually[1]
Website:::موقع رئيس الحكومة:::
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A newly appointed prime minister is responsible for forming the government it will head by leading negotiations between the king and parliament to fill ministry positions.[4] Until the new government is approved by the king and formally takes office, parliament approves and oversees government programs and public service. There are no constitutional limits on a prime minister's term, and several have served multiple non-consecutive terms.

Unlike typical presidential systems where the president is the highest ranking leader of the executive branch and is considered both head of government and head of state, the Moroccan head of state is the king who holds substantial discretionary power over the executive branch and has exclusive authority over the military, religion, and the judiciary.[3]

There are five living Former prime Ministers of Morocco. Ahmed Laraki (born 1931), Ahmed Osman (politician) (born 1930), Driss Jettou (born 1945), Abbas El Fassi (born 1940) and Abdelilah Benkirane (born 1954).

List of Prime Ministers

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See also

References

  1. "Maroc : Benkirane gagne 50.000 dirhams par mois". www.yabiladi.com.
  2. "Moroccans approve king's reforms". BBC News. 2 July 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2018.
  3. Karam, Souhail (17 June 2011). "Morocco King to lose some powers, remain key figure". Reuters. Retrieved 9 February 2018.
  4. "Morocco King Names New Cabinet, Islamists Lose Key Post". Voice of America. Reuters. 5 April 2017. Retrieved 9 February 2018.


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