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Chief Minister of Jersey

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Chief Minister of Jersey
  • Premier/ère Ministre de Jersey (French)
  • Chef Minnistre dé Jèrri (Jèrriais)
since 30 January 2024
Government of Jersey
States Assembly
StatusHead of government
Member of
AppointerStates Assembly
Term lengthNo term length
The Chief minister is nominated by the States Assembly following a general election or resignation of the previous chief minister
Inaugural holderFrank Walker
Formation8 December 2005; 18 years ago (2005-12-08)
DeputyDeputy chief minister
Salary£46,600 annually[1][2]
(as a Member of the States Assembly)
Websitehttps://www.gov.je

The Chief Minister of Jersey (French: Premier/ère Ministre de Jersey; Jèrriais: Chef Minnistre dé Jèrri) is the head of government of Jersey, leading the Council of Ministers, which makes up part of the Government of Jersey. The head of government is not directly elected by the people but rather by the legislature, the States Assembly.

The post was created by reforms to the machinery of government to change from a consensus style of government by committee of the whole States of Jersey to a system of cabinet government under a Chief Minister.

List of Chief Ministers

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Portrait Chief Minister
Seat
Term of office Party Mandate Deputy Chief Minister
Party
Start End Duration
Frank Walker Frank Walker
Senator
8 December
2005
12 December
2008
3 years, 4 days Independent 2005 Terry Le Sueur
Independent
Terry Le Sueur Terry Le Sueur
Senator
12 December
2008
18 November
2011
2 years, 341 days Independent 2008 Philip Ozouf
Independent
Ian Gorst Ian Gorst
Senator
18 November
2011
7 June
2018
6 years, 201 days Independent 2011 Ian Le Marquand
Independent
2014 Andrew Green
Independent
John Le Fondré
Senator
7 June
2018
11 July
2022
4 years, 34 days Independent 2018 Lyndon Farnham
Independent
Jersey Alliance
Kristina Moore Kristina Moore
Deputy for St Mary, St Ouen, and St Peter
11 July
2022
30 January
2024
1 year, 203 days Better Way 2022 Kirsten Morel
Independent
Lyndon Farnham Lyndon Farnham
Deputy for St Mary, St Ouen, and St Peter
30 January
2024
Incumbent 301 days Independent Tom Binet
Independent

Timeline

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Lyndon FarnhamKristina MooreJohn Le FondréIan GorstTerry Le SueurFrank Walker (Jersey politician)


2000s

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2005 election

The first chief minister of Jersey was elected on 5 December 2005 following the 2005 Jersey general election.

Two candidates were nominated on 1 December 2005:

In a secret ballot on Monday, 5 December 2005, the States of Jersey elected Senator Walker to be the first chief minister in Jersey history, receiving 38 votes to Senator Syvret's 14 votes of support, an unsurprising result for the latter who considered himself the underdog (a concern he had expressed during the preceding weekend in an interview with Channel Television).

2008 election

Senator Terry Le Sueur was elected chief minister on 8 December 2008 following the 2008 Jersey general election.[3]

In a secret ballot, the States of Jersey voted for Senator Le Sueur with 36 votes. The only other challenger, Senator Alan Breckon, received 17 votes.

2010s

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2011 election

chief ministerial candidates Senator Ian Gorst and Senator Sir Philip Bailhache on 14 November 2011, just before the vote.

Senator Ian Gorst was elected chief minister in an open ballot on 14 November 2011, beating Senator Sir Philip Bailhache 27 votes to 24. He nominated his preferred candidates for ministerial office on 16 November 2011,[4] and took office as chief minister following the completion of elections of ministers on 18 November 2011.[5]

2014 election

2018 election

Senator John Le Fondré was voted in as Jersey's fourth chief minister by 30 votes to 19, defeating Senator Ian Gorst who was looking to serve for a third term in the role.[6] Gorst continued to serve on the Council of Ministers, taking over the external relations portfolio.

Senator Lyndon Farnham also declared an interest in standing as chief minister,[7] but withdrew from the race to support Senator Le Fondré prior to the vote in the States Assembly - opting to remain as Minister for Economic Development instead.[8]

2020s

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2022 General Election

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In January 2022, former Senator Sir Philip Bailhache announced he was seeking a return to front-line politics, and would stand as the Jersey Liberal Conservatives' candidate for Chief Minister if he was voted back in.[9] He previously ran for the position in 2011.

The following month, the incumbent Chief Minister, Senator John Le Fondré, announced he would be standing as a candidate for the Jersey Alliance party. But he was not chosen as the party's candidate for leader,[10] with members backing Sir Mark Boleat instead. It meant that even if Senator Le Fondré was re-elected, he would only serve one term as Chief Minister.

In May, Senator Kristina Moore, who served as Home Affairs Minister during Ian Gorst's premiership, announced her intention to stand for Chief Minister if re-elected.[11]

For the 2022 general election, the title of Senator was abolished and all candidates stood as Deputies or Constables.[12] As Senators were the only position to be elected using an island-wide vote, they traditionally took on the Ministerial roles in Jersey's government. 2022 would be the first time a Chief Minister would be appointed without an island-wide mandate since the position was established in 2005.

Islanders went to the polls in June, with John Le Fondré's Alliance party suffering a bruising defeat,[13] meaning neither he nor his party leader, Sir Mark Boleat, were in a position to stand for Chief Minister. Candidates aligned to political parties were not as popular with the electorate as independent candidates, so Sir Philip Bailhache did not have enough support from States members to put himself forward.[14]

The only party to increase their number of seats in the Assembly was Reform Jersey; this led Deputy Sam Mézec to announce his intention to stand as the party's candidate for Chief Minister.[15]

On Friday 1 July, States members elected Deputy Moore as Jersey's first female Chief Minister.[16] Her picks for the Council of Ministers were all backed in the States Assembly, including retaining Ian Gorst as Treasury Minister.[17]

Candidate States Members' vote
1 July 2022
Votes %
Kristina Moore 39 79.6
Sam Mézec 10 20.4
Kristina Moore elected

See also

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References

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  1. ^ https://statesassembly.gov.je/assemblyreports/2019/r.89-2019finalcorrected.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ Jersey, States of. "Government of Jersey". gov.je. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Terry le Sueur is Chief Minister » News » This is Jersey". Archived from the original on 10 December 2008. Retrieved 2009-02-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ "Nominations announced for ministerial posts". Retrieved 16 November 2011.
  5. ^ "Deputy Anne Pryke wins a four-way battle for Health". Jersey Evening Post. 19 November 2011.
  6. ^ "Senator John le Fondre is Jersey's new chief minister". BBC News. 4 June 2018.
  7. ^ "Farnham: 'I want to be Chief Minister'". 13 January 2018.
  8. ^ "Candidates prepare for home stretch in Chief Minister race". 2 June 2018.
  9. ^ "Ex-Minister To Stand For CM If Elected". Channel 103.
  10. ^ "New Chief Minister After Election". Channel 103. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  11. ^ "Moore Wants To Be Next Chief Minister". Channel 103. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  12. ^ "Removal of Jersey senator roles given final approval". BBC News. 22 April 2021.
  13. ^ "Jersey Alliance leader reflects on dismal night for the party". ITV News. 23 June 2022.
  14. ^ "Mézec Or Moore For Chief Minister". Channel 103.
  15. ^ "Mézec To Challenge For Chief Minister". Channel 103.
  16. ^ "Moore Becomes First Female CM". Channel 103.
  17. ^ "Moore's Ministers Approved". Channel 103.
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