Prime Minister of Transnistria
The prime minister of Transnistria is the head of government of the Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic.
Prime Minister of the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic | |
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Residence | Tiraspol |
Appointer | Vadim Krasnoselsky, as President of Transnistria |
Inaugural holder | Pyotr Stepanov |
Formation | 18 January 2012 |
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Transnistria |
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See also |
History
From 3 September to 29 November 1990, there was a separate position of Chairman of the Government (Council of Ministers), the acting was Stanislav Moroz. After that, the office of Prime Minister was abolished. Until 2012, the head of government is the president.
Prime Minister of Transnistria was introduced on 1 January 2012 in accordance with amendments made in June 2011 to the Constitution of Transnistria.
List of prime ministers of Transnistria
№ | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Tenure | Political Affiliation | Legislature | President | ||
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Took Office | Left Office | |||||||
— | Statnislav Moroz (1938–2013) Acting Prime Minister |
3 September 1990 | 9 December 1990 | CPSU | Provisional Supreme Soviet |
Chairman of the Presidium Igor Smirnov (1990–1991) | ||
Post is abolished, the government was headed by the President | ||||||||
1 | Pyotr Stepanov (born 1959) |
18 January 2012 | 10 July 2013 | Independent | V (2010) |
Yevgeny Shevchuk (2011–2016) | ||
2 | Tatiana Turanskaya (born 1972) |
10 July 2013 | 13 October 2015 | Independent | ||||
— | Maija Parnas (born 1974) Acting Prime Minister |
13 October 2015 | 30 November 2015 | Independent | ||||
(2) | Tatiana Turanskaya (born 1972) |
30 November 2015 | 2 December 2015 | Independent | ||||
— | Maija Parnas (born 1974) Acting Prime Minister |
2 December 2015 | 23 December 2015 | Independent | ||||
3 | Pavel Prokudin (born 1966) |
23 December 2015 | 17 December 2016 | Independent | VI (2015) | |||
4 | Aleksandr Martynov (born 1981) |
17 December 2016 | Incumbent | Independent | Vadim Krasnoselsky (2016–present) | |||
gollark: Sure they are. Both are just "government arbitrarily deciding what some people can do with each other".
gollark: I couldn't say, I've never seriously done forest (or otherwise) arson.
gollark: I mean, it would be less arbitrary by some metrics to go "nothing is a person, human life has value 0" but people don't like that.
gollark: A more arbitrary rule might be better if it lines up with moral intuitions even.
gollark: That is still not actually objective. Also, threshold of probability on that?
External links
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