The Crown’s dignified relationship with the Beehive

Background to the Ceremony on November 27 and thereafter

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Wellington, November 24, 2023

New Zealand’s Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro will appoint the new Ministry at a ceremony at the Government House Wellington at 11 am on Monday 27 November.

During the ceremony, Dame Cindy will exercise her reserve powers to appoint Christopher Luxon as Prime Minister and as an Executive Councillor.

The ceremony will also involve the appointment of a new Executive Council; a meeting of the Executive Council at which Councillors will take their oaths and affirmations; and the appointment of Executive Councillors to Ministerial portfolios.

Parliamentary Under-Secretaries will then be appointed and take their oaths or affirmations.

About the Executive Council

The Executive Council is the highest formal instrument of government. It is created by the Letters Patent which also establishes the Office of Governor-General and is part of the executive branch of government that carries out formal acts of government.

The Executive Council comprises all Ministers of the Crown, whether those Ministers are inside or outside Cabinet.

It is the highest formal instrument of government and is created by the Letters Patent and also establish the Office of Governor-General. The Executive Council is part of the executive branch of government that carries out formal acts of government.

The Governor-General presides over, but is not a member of, the Executive Council. Following the formation of a government, the Governor-General appoints the Prime Minister-designate as an Executive Councillor and then signs that person’s warrant of appointment as Prime Minister. Once appointed, the Prime Minister advises the Governor-General to appoint other Councillors. After they are appointed, a meeting of the Executive Council is convened and Councillors take the oaths or affirmations required by law.

The principal function of the Executive Council is to advise the Governor-General to make Orders in Council (to make, for example, regulations or appointments) that are required to give effect to the Government’s decisions. Apart from Acts of Parliament, Orders in Council are the main method by which the government implements decisions that need legal force. The Executive Council also meets from time to time to carry out formal acts of state.

The Office of the Clerk

The Clerk of the Executive Council (who is usually also the Secretary of the Cabinet) is formally appointed by the Governor-General on the advice of the Prime Minister. The Clerk is directly responsible to the Governor-General and to the Prime Minister for servicing the Executive Council and providing advice, as necessary, on constitutional matters. The Clerk of the Executive Council is Rachel Hayward.

The Executive Council generally meets every Monday in the Executive Wing of the Parliamentary complex in Wellington after meetings of the Cabinet. For urgent matters, or in emergencies, the Executive Council may meet at other times and venues and the Letters Patent provide for the use of any means that allows each member to participate effectively throughout the whole of the meeting. This provision allows the Executive Council to meet by teleconference, if necessary.

The Procedures

At the meetings, the Executive Council gives formal advice to the Governor-General to sign Orders in Council. Almost all items for consideration by the Executive Council must be authorised by the Cabinet.

The quorum for an Executive Council meeting is two Executive Councillors, plus the Presiding Officer. When available to attend, the Governor-General presides over the Executive Council. When the Governor-General is not available, the most senior member of the Executive Council present at the meeting is the presiding officer.

Executive Council proceedings are confidential. When Executive Councillors are appointed, they swear an oath under the Oaths and Declarations Act 1957 that they “will not directly or indirectly reveal such matters as shall be debated in Council and committed to secrecy.”

The meetings also provide an opportunity for Ministers to brief the Governor-General on significant political and constitutional issues that may have arisen during the week.

Source: Office of the Governor-General, Government House, Wellington, New Zealand

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