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First government of Ximo Puig

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1st government of Ximo Puig

Government of the Valencian Community
2015–2019
Ximo Puig in February 2016.
Date formed30 June 2015
Date dissolved17 June 2019
People and organisations
MonarchFelipe VI
PresidentXimo Puig
Vice PresidentMónica Oltra
No. of ministers9[a]
Total no. of members10[a]
Member party  PSPV–PSOE
  Compromís
Status in legislatureMinority coalition government
Opposition party  PP
Opposition leaderAlberto Fabra (2015)
Isabel Bonig (2015–2019)
History
Election2015 regional election
Outgoing election2019 regional election
Legislature term9th Corts
Budget2016, 2017, 2018, 2019
PredecessorFabra
SuccessorPuig II

The first government of Ximo Puig was formed on 30 June 2015, following the latter's election as President of the Valencian Government by the Corts Valencianes on 25 June and his swearing-in on 28 June, as a result of the Socialist Party of the Valencian Country (PSPV–PSOE) and Commitment Coalition (Compromís) being able to muster a majority of seats in the Parliament with external support from We Can (Podemos) following the 2015 Valencian regional election.[1] It succeeded the Fabra government and was the Valencian Government from 30 June 2015 to 17 June 2019, a total of 1,448 days, or 3 years, 11 months and 18 days.

The cabinet comprised members of the PSPV–PSOE and Compromís, as well as a number of independents proposed by both parties.[2][3] It was automatically dismissed on 29 April 2019 as a consequence of the 2019 regional election, but remained in acting capacity until the next government was sworn in.

Investiture

[edit]
Investiture
Ximo Puig (PSPV)
Ballot → 25 June 2015
Required majority → 50 out of 99 checkY
Yes
50 / 99
No
  • PP (31)
  • C's (13)
44 / 99
Abstentions
5 / 99
Absentees
0 / 99
Sources[4][5][6]

Cabinet changes

[edit]

Puig's first government saw a number of cabinet changes during its tenure:

Council of Government

[edit]

The Valencian Government was structured into the offices for the president, the vice president, nine ministries and the post of the secretary–spokesperson of the Government.[9]

Puig I Government
(30 June 2015 – 17 June 2019)
Portfolio Name Party Took office Left office Ref.
President Ximo Puig PSPV–PSOE 27 June 2015 15 June 2019 [10]
Vice President and Minister of Equality and Inclusive Policies
Secretary and Spokesperson of the Government
Mónica Oltra Compromís (IdPV) 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]
Minister of Finance and Economic Model Vicent Soler PSPV–PSOE 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]
Minister of Justice, Public Administration, Democratic Reforms and Public Freedoms Gabriela Bravo PSPV–PSOE (Ind.) 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]
Minister of Education, Research, Culture and Sports Vicent Marzà Compromís (Bloc) 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]
Minister of Universal Healthcare and Public Health Carmen Montón PSPV–PSOE 30 June 2015 7 June 2018 [11]
Minister of Sustainable Economy, Productive Sectors, Trade and Labour Rafael Climent Compromís (Bloc) 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]
Minister of Agriculture, Environment, Climatic Change and Rural Development Elena Cebrián PSPV–PSOE (Ind.) 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]
Minister of Housing, Public Works and Territory Structuring María José Salvador PSPV–PSOE 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]
Minister of Transparency, Social Responsibility, Participation and Cooperation Manuel Alcaraz Compromís (IdPV) 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 [11]

Changes June 2018

[edit]
Portfolio Name Party Took office Left office Ref.
Minister of Universal Healthcare and Public Health Ana Barceló PSPV–PSOE 7 June 2018 17 June 2019 [12]

Departmental structure

[edit]

Ximo Puig's second government was organised into several superior and governing units, whose number, powers and hierarchical structure varied depending on the ministerial department.[9]

Office
(Original name)
Portrait Name Took office Left office Alliance/party Ref.
Presidency
(Presidencia de la Generalitat)
Ximo Puig 27 June 2015 15 June 2019 PSPV–PSOE
Vice Presidency and Ministry of
Equality and Inclusive Policies

(Vicepresidencia y Conselleria de
Igualdad y Políticas Inclusivas)
Mónica Oltra 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 Compromís
(IdPV)
Ministry of Finance
and Economic Model

(Conselleria de Hacienda
y Modelo Económico)
Vicent Soler 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 PSPV–PSOE
Ministry of Justice, Public
Administration, Democratic Reforms
and Public Freedoms

(Conselleria de Justicia, Administración
Pública, Reformas Democráticas
y Libertades Públicas)
Gabriela Bravo 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 PSPV–PSOE
(Independent)
Ministry of Education,
Research, Culture and Sports

(Conselleria de Educación,
Investigación, Cultura y Deporte)
Vicent Marzà 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 Compromís
(Bloc)
Ministry of Universal
Healthcare and Public Health

(Conselleria de Sanidad
Universal y Salud Pública)
Carmen Montón 30 June 2015 7 June 2018 PSPV–PSOE
Ana Barceló 7 June 2018 17 June 2019 PSPV–PSOE
(Independent)
Ministry of Sustainable Economy,
Productive Sectors, Trade and Labour

(Conselleria de Economía Sostenible,
Sectores Productivos, Comercio y Trabajo)
Rafael Climent 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 Compromís
(Bloc)
Ministry of Agriculture,
Environment, Climatic Change
and Rural Development

(Conselleria de Agricultura, Medio Ambiente,
Cambio Climático y Desarrollo Rural)
Elena Cebrián 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 PSPV–PSOE
(Independent)
Ministry of Housing, Public Works
and Territory Structuring

(Conselleria de Vivienda, Obras Públicas
y Vertebración del Territorio)
María José Salvador 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 PSPV–PSOE
Ministry of Transparency, Social
Responsibility, Participation
and Cooperation

(Conselleria de Transparencia,
Responsabilidad Social, Participación
y Cooperación)
Manuel Alcaraz 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 Compromís
(IdPV)
Secretary and Spokesperson
of the Government

(Secretaría y Portavoz del Consell)
Mónica Oltra 30 June 2015 17 June 2019 Compromís
(IdPV)

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Does not include the President.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Sanjuan, Héctor (28 June 2019). "Los 300 pasos de Ximo Puig: de periodista en el Palau a presidente" (in Spanish). Valencia: El Mundo. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  2. ^ Ferrandis, Joaquín (1 July 2015). "¿Cómo son los nuevos consejeros?". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  3. ^ David, Laura L. (30 June 2015). "Los consejeros del bipartito valenciano prometen el cargo". El Periódico de Catalunya (in Spanish). Barcelona. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  4. ^ "Eleccions a les Corts Valencianes (1983 - 2019)". Historia Electoral.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 July 2019.
  5. ^ Ferrandis, Joaquín (25 June 2015). "El socialista Ximo Puig elegido nuevo presidente del Gobierno valenciano". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  6. ^ Pérez, Iván (25 June 2015). "Ximo Puig ya es presidente". El Mundo (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  7. ^ Vázquez, Cristina (7 June 2018). "Ana Barceló sustituye a Montón al frente de la sanidad valenciana". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  8. ^ Sanjuan, Héctor (7 June 2018). "Puig nombra a Ana Barceló consellera de Sanidad sin consultar a Oltra". El Mundo (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  9. ^ a b "Decreto 7/2015, de 29 de junio, del president de la Generalitat, por el que determina las consellerias en que se organiza la administración de la Generalitat" (PDF). Diari Oficial de la Generalitat Valenciana (in Spanish) (7560). Generalitat Valenciana: 20759–20760. 30 June 2015. ISSN 0212-8195.
  10. ^ "Real Decreto 581/2015, de 26 de junio, por el que se nombra president de la Generalitat Valenciana a Ximo Puig i Ferrer" (PDF). Diari Oficial de la Generalitat Valenciana (in Spanish) (7558). Generalitat Valenciana: 20648. 27 June 2015. ISSN 0212-8195.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Decreto 8/2015, de 29 de junio, del president de la Generalitat, por el que nombra vicepresidenta, consellers, secretaria y portavoz del Consell" (PDF). Diari Oficial de la Generalitat Valenciana (in Spanish) (8572). Generalitat Valenciana: 20847. 30 June 2015. ISSN 0212-8195.
  12. ^ "Decreto 11/2018, de 7 de junio, del president de la Generalitat, por el que nombra consellera de Sanidad Universal y Salud Pública" (PDF). Diari Oficial de la Generalitat Valenciana (in Spanish) (8312). Generalitat Valenciana: 23900. 7 June 2018. ISSN 0212-8195.
Preceded by Valencian Government
2015–2019
Succeeded by