Ministre de cabinet pour le Développement international du cabinet fantôme
Apparence
(Redirigé depuis Secrétaire d'État au Développement international du cabinet fantôme)
Ministre de cabinet fantôme pour le Développement international Shadow Cabinet Minister for International Development | |
Titulaire actuel Harriett Baldwin depuis le | |
Site internet | The Shadow Cabinet |
---|---|
modifier |
Le ministre de cabinet fantôme pour le Développement international est le principal porte-parole de l'opposition officielle du Royaume-Uni sur les questions liées au département du Développement international (DfID), qui est responsable de l'aide internationale, notamment dans les pays du tiers monde.
En novembre 2021, le poste de secrétaire d'État est renommé comme ministre de cabinet et placé sous le secrétaire d'État des Affaires étrangères du cabinet fantôme.
Ministres de cabinet et secrétaires d'État fantômes
[modifier | modifier le code]Notes et références
[modifier | modifier le code]- « Kinnock splits his top Treasury team », The Glasgow Herald, , p. 1
- Nicholas Timmins, « Smith revamps Shadow Cabinet: Nicholas Timmins analyses the Labour line-up and looks at the backgrounds of the newcomers », The Independent, London, (consulté le )
- Martin Linton, « Women's lists 'not illegal': The New Shadow Cabinet », The Guardian, Manchester, (lire en ligne, consulté le )
- Nicholas Timms, « Blair uses reshuffle to put own sta on Shadow Cabinet: Brown stays as shadow Chancellor—Cook takes foreign affairs—Straw is shadow Home Secretary—Beckett moves to health », The Independent, (consulté le )
- John Rentoul, « A rare national treasure in peril », The Independent, (lire en ligne)
- « Opposition Front Bench Spokespersons as at 13 May 1997 (Interim List) », Weekly Information Bulletin, House of Commons Information Office,
- « Hague Makes Final Appointments », Politics 97, BBC News, (consulté le )
- « Hague reshuffles shadow cabinet », (consulté le )
- « Eurosceptics prosper under Duncan Smith », BBC News, (consulté le )
- « Howard unveils his top team », BBC News, (consulté le )
- « Howard expands shadow cabinet in reshuffle », The Telegraph, (consulté le )
- « Reshuffle deals Tories mixed hand », The Scotsman, (consulté le )
- « Cameron's frontlilne team unveiled », BBC News,
- Rosa Prince, « Mandelson and Adonis step down », The Telegraph,
- « Douglas Alexander MP », House of Commons Information Office (consulté le )
- Rosa Prince, « Ed Miliband unveils shocks in shadow cabinet selections », The Telegraph,
- « Labour's Shadow Cabinet », Labour.org.uk,
- http://www.jimmurphymp.com/jims-blog/blog.aspx?b=33 « Copie archivée » (version du sur Internet Archive)
- (en) « Labour reshuffle follows Murphy exit », sur bbc.co.uk, BBC News, (consulté le ).
- (en) « Shadow Cabinet: Who's In And Who's Out? », Sky News, (consulté le )
- Richard Wood replied for the Opposition in a debate on 24 February, six days after Margaret Thatcher named her Shadow Cabinet. Various other Conservatives, including the Reginald Maudling (as Shadow Foreign Secretary), Peter Tapsell, and John Davies (as Shadow Foreign Secretary) replied in debates on overseas development thereafter.
- John Major's interim Shadow Cabinet consisted of those members of his Cabinet who retained their seats at the 1997 general election, but there had been no International Development Secretary, and the Overseas Development Minister was not in Cabinet. According to the Shadow Cabinet list, Major himself was responsible for Foreign Affairs (the department responsible for development in his government), but ministers could call on the services of Members who served under them in Government[6]. It is unknown whether Major called on the service of Baroness Chalker of Wallasey, the last Minister for Overseas Development, during the approximately two months before William Hague was elected leader. Therefore it is unclear whether the office was vacant or non-existent, or whether Major or Chalker should be considered to have held it.
- Under Labour Party rules, ministers shadow their former roles when the party enters opposition[14]. Alexander was International Development Secretary when Gordon Brown resigned as Prime Minister[15].