Deputy prime minister

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A deputy prime minister or vice prime minister is, in some countries, a government minister who can take the position of acting prime minister when the prime minister is temporarily absent. The position is often likened to that of a vice president, as both positions are "number two" offices, but there are some differences.

The states of Australia and provinces of Canada each have the analogous office of deputy premier. In the devolved administrations of the United Kingdom, an analogous position is that of the deputy First Minister, albeit the position in Northern Ireland has equivalent powers to the First Minister differing only in the titles of the offices. In Canada, the position of deputy prime minister should not be confused with the Canadian deputy minister of the prime minister of Canada, a nonpolitical civil servant position.

In Austria and Germany, the officeholder is known as vice-chancellor.

A deputy prime minister traditionally serves as acting prime minister when the prime minister is temporarily absent or incapable of exercising power. The deputy prime minister is often asked to succeed to the prime minister's office following the prime minister's sudden death or unexpected resignation, but that is not necessarily mandated by the constitution. This government position is often a job that is held simultaneously with another ministry, and is usually given to one of the most senior or experienced ministers of the cabinet. The holder of this office may also be deputy leader of the governing party, or perhaps the leader of the junior party of a coalition government.

Little scholarly attention has focused on deputy prime ministers, as they are sometimes less involved in the political power plays of government and more focus on the work at hand. A 2009 study in Political Science identified nine 'qualities' of deputy prime ministership: temperament; relationships with their Cabinet and caucus; relationships with their party; popularity with the public; media skills; achievements as deputy prime minister; relationship with the prime minister; leadership ambition; and method of succession.[1]

By contrast, the structure of the Government of Russia[2] and Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine provides for several deputy prime ministers or vice prime ministers.[3] In the case of the Russian government, the prime minister is responsible for defining the scope of the duties for each of their deputies,[4] who also may head a specific ministry: e.g. the former Minister of Finance of Russia, Alexey Kudrin, also serves as one of the deputies of the prime ministers or vice-premiers. One or two of these deputy prime ministers may hold the title of a first deputy prime minister. Russian federal law indicates that in accordance with the order established in advance, one of the deputy prime ministers may temporarily substitute for the prime minister in their absence. Customarily, however, it is to one of the "first" Deputy prime ministers that the prime-ministerial duties may be delegated. At the same time, in the case of prime minister's resignation, the law allows the President of Russia to choose any of the current vice-premiers to serve as an acting prime minister until the confirmation of the new government.[5]

There is also the special case of Belgium: in the Federal Government of Belgium, a deputy prime minister not only replaces the prime minister in the case they are incapacitated, but also acts as the link between the government and their political party. In short, in Belgium, a Deputy prime minister is the voice of their political party in the federal government, and they are the voice of the government in their political party. The prime minister and the deputy prime ministers form what is called the "inner cabinet" (kernkabinet; conseil des ministres restreint or kern), an instance where the most important political decisions are discussed and taken.

Lists of deputy prime ministers

StateOfficeOfficeholderAssumed office
 AfghanistanDeputy prime ministerAbdul Ghani Baradar (acting, first)7 September 2021
Abdul Salam Hanafi (acting, second)
Abdul Kabir (acting, third)4 October 2021
 AlbaniaDeputy prime ministerArben Ahmetaj18 September 2021
 Antigua and BarbudaDeputy prime ministerRobin Yearwood
 ArmeniaDeputy prime ministerTigran Avinyan11 May 2018
Mher Grigoryan
 AustraliaDeputy prime ministerRichard Marles23 May 2022
 AustriaVice-chancellorWerner Kogler7 January 2020
 BahamasDeputy prime ministerChester Cooper17 September 2021
 BarbadosDeputy prime ministerSantia Bradshaw26 January 2022
 BelgiumDeputy prime ministerPierre-Yves Dermagne1 October 2020
Georges Gilkinet
Vincent Van Peteghem
Frank Vandenbroucke
Petra De Sutter
David Clarinval22 April 2022
Paul Van Tigchelt22 October 2023
 BelizeDeputy prime ministerCordel Hyde16 November 2020
 CambodiaDeputy prime ministerAun Pornmoniroth6 September 2018
Vongsey Vissoth22 August 2023
Sar Sokha
Tea Seiha
Hangchuon Naron
Sok Chenda Sophea
Keut Rith
Say Sam Al
Sun Chanthol
Neth Savoeun
 CanadaDeputy prime ministerChrystia Freeland20 November 2019
 ChinaFirst vice premierDing Xuexiang12 March 2023
Second vice premierHe Lifeng
Third vice premierZhang Guoqing
Fourth vice premierLiu Guozhong
 CroatiaDeputy prime ministerDamir Krstičević19 October 2016
Predrag Štromar9 June 2017
Davor Božinović19 July 2019
Zdravko Marić
 Czech RepublicFirst deputy prime ministerVít Rakušan17 December 2021
Deputy prime ministerMarian Jurečka17 December 2021
Ivan Bartoš17 December 2021
Vlastimil Válek17 December 2021
 DenmarkDeputy Prime MinisterTroels Lund Poulsen23 October 2022
 DominicaDeputy Prime MinisterIrving McIntyre13 December 2022
 East TimorDeputy prime ministerArmanda Berta dos Santos29 May 2020
José Maria dos Reis24 June 2020
 EswatiniDeputy prime ministerThemba N. Masuku[6]4 November 2018
 EthiopiaDeputy Prime Minister of EthiopiaTemesgen Tiruneh21 September 2012
 FijiDeputy prime ministerBiman Prasad24 Dec 2022
 FinlandDeputy prime ministerAnnika Saarikko10 September 2020
 GeorgiaVice Prime Minister of GeorgiaThea Tsulukiani31 March 2021
Levan Davitashvili12 July 2021
 GermanyVice-ChancellorRobert Habeck8 December 2021
 GreeceDeputy prime ministerVacant (since 2023)N/A
 HungaryDeputy prime ministerZsolt Semjén1 June 2010
 IndiaDeputy prime ministerVacant (since 2004)N/A
 IrelandTánaisteMicheál Martin17 December 2022
 IsraelDeputy prime ministerYariv Levin29 December 2022
Vice prime ministerVacant (since 2023)N/A
 ItalyDeputy prime ministerMatteo Salvini22 October 2022
Antonio Tajani22 October 2022
 JamaicaDeputy prime ministerHorace Chang7 September 2020
 JapanDeputy prime ministerVacant (since 2021)N/A
 KazakhstanFirst deputy prime ministerAlihan Smaiylov25 February 2019
Deputy prime ministerRoman Sklyar18 September 2019
Eraly Togjanov11 February 2020
 KyrgyzstanFirst deputy chairman of the cabinet of ministersArzybek Kojoshev13 October 2021
Deputy chairman of the cabinet of ministersvariable, currently three deputiesby cabinet
 LaosDeputy prime minister
 LebanonDeputy prime ministerSaadeh Al Shami10 September 2021
 LesothoDeputy prime ministerMathibeli Mokhothu21 May 2020
 LuxembourgDeputy prime ministersFrançois Bausch11 October 2019
Paulette Lenert5 January 2022
 MalaysiaDeputy Prime MinistersAhmad Zahid Hamidi3 December 2022
Fadillah Yusof
 MaltaDeputy prime ministerChris Fearne17 July 2017
 MauritiusDeputy prime ministerLouis Steven Obeegadoo25 June 2020
Vice prime ministerFazila Jeewa-Daureeawoo16 November 2017
 MoldovaDeputy Prime MinisterMihai Popșoi29 January 2024
Dumitru Alaiba16 February 2023
Vladimir Bolea16 February 2023
Cristina Gherasimov5 February 2024
Oleg Serebrian19 January 2022
 MongoliaDeputy prime ministerAmarsaikhan Sainbuyan29 January 2021
 MontenegroDeputy prime ministerVladimir Joković28 April 2022
Raško Konjević
Jovana Marović
Ervin Ibrahimović
 MyanmarDeputy prime ministerSoe Win1 August 2021
Mya Tun Oo1 February 2023[7]
Tin Aung San
Win Shein
Than Swe3 August 2023[8]
 NamibiaDeputy-prime ministerNetumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah21 March 2015
   NepalDeputy prime ministerNarayan Kaji Shrestha26 December 2022
Rabi Lamichhane6 March 2024
Raghubir Mahaseth
Upendra Yadav10 March 2024
 NetherlandsDeputy prime ministerCarola Schouten10 January 2022
Karien van Gennip5 September 2023
Rob Jetten8 January 2024
 New ZealandDeputy prime ministerWinston Peters27 November 2023
 North MacedoniaDeputy prime ministerArtan Grubi
Slavica Grkovska
Fatmir Bitiḱi
Bojan Maričiḱ
16 January 2022
 OmanDeputy prime minister
Fahd bin Mahmoud Al Said1972
Asa'ad bin Tariq Al Said2017
Shihab bin Tariq Al Said2020
 PakistanDeputy prime ministerVacant (since 2012)N/A
 Papua New GuineaDeputy prime ministerVacant11 May 2022
 PolandDeputy prime ministerWładysław Kosiniak-Kamysz13 December 2023
Krzysztof Gawkowski
 PortugalDeputy prime ministerVacant (since 2015)N/A
 QatarDeputy prime ministerKhalid bin Mohammad Al AttiyahJanuary 2016
 RomaniaDeputy prime ministerDan Barna23 December 2020
Deputy prime ministerKelemen Hunor23 December 2020
 RussiaFirst Deputy Chairman of the GovernmentAndrey Belousov21 January 2020
Deputy Chairmen of the Governmentvariable, up to eight deputiesby cabinet
 Saint Kitts and NevisDeputy prime ministerShawn Richards22 February 2015
 Saint LuciaDeputy prime ministerErnest HilaireJanuary 2022
 Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesDeputy prime ministerMontgomery Daniel7 November 2020
 SamoaDeputy prime ministerTuala Iosefo Ponifasio24 May 2021
 Saudi ArabiaDeputy prime ministerVacant (since 2022)N/A
 SerbiaFirst deputy prime ministerIvica Dačić27 April 2014
Deputy prime ministerRasim Ljajić27 July 2012
Zorana Mihajlović27 April 2014
Nebojša Stefanović11 August 2016
 SingaporeDeputy prime ministerHeng Swee Keat1 May 2019
Lawrence Wong13 Jun 2022
 SloveniaDeputy prime ministerZdravko Počivalšek13 March 2020
Matej Tonin
Aleksandra Pivec
 Solomon IslandsDeputy prime ministerManasseh Maelanga[9]1 November 2019
 South KoreaDeputy prime ministerLee Ju-ho7 November 2022
Choi Sang-mok29 December 2023
 SpainDeputy prime ministerNadia Calviño12 July 2021
 SwedenDeputy prime ministerMargot Wallström3 October 2014
Isabella Lövin25 May 2016
 SyriaDeputy prime ministerAli Abdullah Ayyoub30 August 2020
 TaiwanVice premierCheng Wen-tsan31 January 2023
 ThailandDeputy prime ministerAnutin Charnvirakul10 July 2019
Phumtham Wechayachai1 September 2023
Somsak Thepsuthin
Parnpree Bahiddha-nukara
Patcharawat Wongsuwon
Pirapan Salirathavibhaga
 TongaDeputy prime ministerPoasi Tei28 December 2021
 TuvaluDeputy prime ministerMinute Alapati Taupo20 September 2019
 UgandaDeputy prime ministerRebecca Kadaga
Moses Ali
Lukia Isanga Nakadama
June 2021
 UkraineDeputy prime ministerYulia SvyrydenkoNovember 2021
 United Arab EmiratesDeputy prime ministerSaif bin Zayed Al Nahyan
Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan
Maktoum bin Mohammed Al Maktoum
 United KingdomDeputy prime ministerOliver Dowden21 April 2023
 VanuatuDeputy prime ministerIshmael Kalsakau[10]21 April 2020
 VietnamFirst deputy prime ministerPhạm Bình Minh6 September 2021
Deputy prime ministerTrần Hồng Hà5 January 2023
Lê Minh Khái8 April 2021
Lê Văn Thành
 YemenDeputy prime ministerVacant (since 2022)N/A

Position abolished

References