Second Andrews Ministry

The Second Andrews Ministry is the 70th ministry of the Government of Victoria. The Labor government, led by Premier Daniel Andrews and Deputy Premier James Merlino, was officially sworn in on 29 November 2018, following the party's second consecutive victory at the 2018 state election, which was held on 24 November 2018.[1]

Second Andrews Ministry
70th Cabinet of Victoria, Australia
Incumbent
Date formed29 November 2018
People and organisations
Head of stateQueen Elizabeth II
Represented byLinda Dessau
Head of governmentDaniel Andrews
Deputy head of governmentJames Merlino
No. of ministers22
Member partyAustralian Labor Party
Status in legislatureLabor majority government
Opposition leaderMichael O'Brien
History
Election(s)2018 state election
PredecessorFirst Andrews Ministry

At the time of its formation the ministry consisted of 22 ministers, eleven of whom were women, making it the first cabinet in Victoria's history to reach gender parity.[2] To accommodate this change Philip Dalidakis was removed from his cabinet position, although his work as a minister was praised by Andrews.[3] Following the resignation of Gavin Jennings and the appointment of Ros Spence on 23 March 2020, the Cabinet became majority female.

The Second Andrews Ministry succeeded the First Andrews Ministry.

Second Andrews Ministry, 2018–present

Minister Portfolio
Daniel Andrews, MP
James Merlino, MP
Tim Pallas, MP
  • Treasurer
  • Minister for Economic Development
  • Minister for Industrial Relations
Jill Hennessy, MP
Jacinta Allan, MP
  • Minister for Transport Infrastructure
  • Minister for Priority Precincts (from 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for the Suburban Rail Loop (from 22 June 2020)
Jenny Mikakos, MLC
  • Deputy Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council (from 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for Health
  • Minister for Ambulance Services
Martin Foley, MP
  • Minister for Mental Health
  • Minister for Equality
  • Minister for Creative Industries
Richard Wynne, MP
  • Minister for Planning
  • Minister for Housing
  • Minister for Multicultural Affairs (until 23 March 2020)
Jaclyn Symes, MLC
  • Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council (from 23 March 2020)
  • Deputy Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council (until 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for Regional Development
  • Minister for Agriculture
  • Minister for Resources
Martin Pakula, MP
  • Minister for Jobs, Innovation & Trade
  • Minister for Tourism, Sport & Major Events
  • Minister for Racing
  • Minister for Business Precincts (from 22 June 2020)
Lisa Neville, MP
  • Minister for Police & Emergency Services
  • Minister for Water
Gabrielle Williams, MP
  • Minister for Women
  • Minister for Prevention of Family Violence
  • Minister for Aboriginal Affairs (from 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for Youth (until 23 March 2020)
Lily D'Ambrosio, MP
  • Minister for Energy, Environment & Climate Change
  • Minister for Solar Homes
Jaala Pulford, MLC
  • Minister for Roads (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Road Safety & the TAC (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Fishing & Boating (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Employment (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Innovation, Medical Research and the Digital Economy (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Small Business (from 22 June 2020)
Luke Donnellan, MP
  • Minister for Child Protection
  • Minister for Disability, Ageing & Carers
Ben Carroll, MP
  • Minister for Crime Prevention (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Corrections (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Youth Justice (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Victim Support (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Public Transport (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Roads and Road Safety (until 22 June 2020)
Danny Pearson, MP
  • Assistant Treasurer (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Regulatory Reform (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Government Services (from 22 June 2020)
Gayle Tierney, MLC
  • Minister for Training & Skills
  • Minister for Higher Education
Melissa Horne, MP
  • Minister for Public Transport (until 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Ports & Freight
  • Minister for Consumer Affairs, Gaming and Liquor Regulation (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Fishing and Boating (from 22 June 2020)
Ros Spence, MP
  • Minister for Multicultural Affairs (from 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for Community Sport (from 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for Youth (from 23 March 2020)
Shaun Leane, MLC
  • Minister for Suburban Development (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Local Government (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Veterans (from 22 June 2020)
Natalie Hutchins, MP
  • Minister for Victim Support (from 22 June 2020)
  • Minister for Corrections, Youth Justice and Crime Prevention (from 22 June 2020)
Former Ministers
Gavin Jennings, MLC
  • Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council (until 23 March 2020)
  • Special Minister of State (until 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for Priority Precincts (until 23 March 2020)
  • Minister for Aboriginal Affairs (until 23 March 2020)
Adem Somyurek, MLC
  • Minister for Local Government (until 15 June 2020)
  • Minister for Small Business (until 15 June 2020)
Robin Scott, MP
  • Assistant Treasurer (until 15 June 2020)
  • Minister for Veterans (until 15 June 2020)
Marlene Kairouz, MP
  • Minister for Consumer Affairs, Gaming & Liquor Regulation (until 16 June 2020)
  • Minister for Suburban Development (until 16 June 2020)

Reshuffles

Gavin Jennings resigned from Parliament and the ministry on 23 March 2020. He was replaced in cabinet by Ros Spence.[4]

On 15 June 2020, Adem Somyurek was dismissed from the ministry due to alleged misconduct, with Robin Scott and Marlene Kairouz also resigning the next day. A reshuffle took place, bringing Shaun Leane into cabinet and reassigning several portfolios.[5]

Crisis Council of Cabinet, 2020–present

The Crisis Council of Cabinet was established on 3 April 2020 as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It consists of the premier and seven ministers who were all sworn in via video conference.[6]

Minister Portfolio
Daniel Andrews, MP
  • Premier
  • Chair – Crisis Council of Cabinet
James Merlino, MP
  • Deputy Premier
  • Minister for the Coordination of Education and Training – COVID-19
Tim Pallas, MP
  • Treasurer
  • Minister for the Coordination of Treasury and Finance – COVID-19
Jill Hennessy, MP
  • Attorney-General
  • Minister for the Coordination of Justice and Community Safety – COVID-19
Jacinta Allan, MP
  • Minister for the Coordination of Transport – COVID-19
Jenny Mikakos, MLC
  • Minister for the Coordination of Health and Human Services – COVID-19
Martin Pakula, MP
  • Minister for the Coordination of Jobs, Precincts and Regions – COVID 19
Lisa Neville, MP
  • Minister for the Coordination of Environment, Land, Water and Planning – COVID-19

References

  1. "Swearing in of the Second Andrews Ministry". Governor of Victoria. 29 November 2018.
  2. "Labor makes history with first Cabinet that is 50 per cent women". The Age. 27 November 2018.
  3. Stephanie Anderson (27 November 2018). "Half of Victoria's ministry positions to go to women, Premier announces". ABC News. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  4. "Women outnumber men in Victorian cabinet after outgoing minister replaced". The Age. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  5. "Victorian Premier announces new Cabinet members after branch-stacking scandal". ABC News. 18 June 2020. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  6. "Crisis Council Of Cabinet Set Up To Combat Coronavirus". Premier of Victoria. 3 April 2020.
Parliament of Victoria
Preceded by
First Andrews Ministry
Second Andrews Ministry
2018–present
Incumbent
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