Government of Jersey | |
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Jèrriais: Gouvèrnément d'Jèrri | |
Overview | |
State | Jersey |
Leader | Chief Minister (Lyndon Farnham) |
Appointed by | Chief Minister, with approval from the States Assembly.[1] |
Main organ | Council of Ministers |
Responsible to | States Assembly |
Headquarters | 19-21 Broad Street, Saint Helier |
Website | www |
Politics of Jersey |
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Category |
The Government of Jersey (Jèrriais: Gouvèrnément d'Jèrri) is the executive body of the States of Jersey and is the central government of the Bailiwick of Jersey.[2] The government is led by the Chief Minister (currently Lyndon Farnham, since 2024), who nominates all the remaining ministers, all elected by the States Assembly.
All Ministers of the Government are required to be elected States members and are accountable to it.[3] They make statements in and take questions from the assembly. The government is dependent on the assembly to make primary legislation, however ministers can make secondary legislation, such as Orders and Regulations. The government is not formed of one single party, but made of multiple independent members.
The 'Government of Jersey' is the official identity of the executive and administrative arm of the States of Jersey. The government no longer uses the term States of Jersey in reference to executive and administrative departments.[2]
Under the uncodified constitution of Jersey, executive power lies in the Council of Ministers, formed of the Chief Minister and his ministers. Before 2005, the States of Jersey held both legislative and executive power through committee-led government
Since the implementation of the States of Jersey (Jersey) Law 2005,[3] the executive and legislative functions have been split between the Council of Ministers and States Assembly respectively. In 2019, the Council of Ministers formally adopted the identity of the 'Government of Jersey' for the executive responsibilities of the States.[2]
The decision-making body for the island's government is the Council of Ministers. The Council lead the island's executive and administrative governance. The ministers are nominated by the Chief Minister or by any States member and confirmed by the States Assembly. The States of Jersey (Jersey) Law 2005 establishes the role and function of ministers.[3]
The administration of the Government is made up by a number of departments that may have more than one minister. The Ministers are responsible each for an area of policy. The Ministers provide policy direction to civil service officers, having given fair consideration and due weight to informed and impartial advice from such officer.[3]
A new (or existing) Chief Minister is (re-)appointed after:
Under the 'One Government' structure implemented by former Government Chief Executive Charlie Parker, there are nine government departments.
Department | Group | Group Director | Minister |
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Office of the Chief Executive | CEO and Head of Public Service | Paul Martin
Interim from March |
Chief Minister |
Chief of Staff | Catherine Madden | Chief Minister | |
Financial Services and Digital Economy | Richard Corrigan | ||
Economy | Dan Houseago | ||
Communications | Dirk Danino-Forsyth | ||
External Relations | Kate Nutt | Ian Gorst | |
Partnerships | TBD | ||
Customer and Local Services (CLS)
Director General: Ian Burns |
Customer Services | Sophie Le Sueur | |
Customer Operations | Steve Jackson | ||
Local Services | Paul McGinnety | ||
Children, Young People, Education and Skills (CYPES)
Director General: Mark Rogers |
Children's Services | Susan Devlin | |
Education | Seán O'Regan | ||
Young People, Further Education, Skills and Learning | Saboohi Famili | ||
Health and Community Services (HCS)
Director General: Caroline Landon |
Group Managing Director | Rob Sainsbury | |
Group Medical Director | Patrick Armstrong Interim | ||
Chief Nurse | Rose Taylor | ||
Health Modernisation | Hilary Lucas | ||
Infrastructure, Housing and Environment (IHE)
Acting Director General: Andrew Scate |
Natural Environment | Willie Peggie | |
Operations and Transport | Ellen Littlechild | ||
Regulation | TBD | ||
Property | Tim Daniels | ||
Capital Projects | TBD | ||
Justice and Home Affairs (JHA)
Director General: Julian Blazeby |
Public Protection and Law Enforcement | Kate Briden | |
Strategic Policy, Planning and Performance
Director General: Tom Walker |
Policy | TBD | |
Strategic Planning and Performance | Dr Anuschka Muller | ||
Strategy and Innovation | Steve Skelton | ||
Statistics Jersey | Dr Duncan Gibaut, Chief Statistician | ||
Medical Officer of Health | Dr Ivan Muscat
Deputy |
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Treasury and Exchequer
Director General: Richard Bull |
Comptroller of Revenue | Richard Summersgill | |
Strategic Finance | Alison Rogers | ||
Performance Accounting and Reporting | Steven Mair | ||
Treasury and Investment Management | Simon Hayward | ||
Risk and Audit | Mike Thomas | ||
Cabinet Office (was Chief Operating Office)
Chief Operating Officer: John Quinn |
People and Corporate Services | Mark Grimley | |
Commercial Services | Maria Benbow | ||
Modernisation and Digital | Fiona Capstick |
In April 2018, the States approved changes to the Government machinery. The Chief Executive was appointed the Principal Accounting Officer for public finances, giving them the control and responsibility for government spending. The Government states this change has improved funding allocations and government transparency.[5] In February 2022, the Democratic Accountability and Governance Sub-Committee.[6]
The same proposition also proposed to make the Government a single legal entity. Currently, each Minister forms a single corporation sole, however when the changes are implemented (as they have been approved), 'Jersey Ministers' as a single entity will become legally responsible for all areas of government. The argument in favour of this is that it will allow more cross-Ministerial working. However, some are worried that this move would lead to more centralisation of power in the Chief Minister and Chief Executive.[6]
The OneGovernment structure has been criticised for blurring the lines of accountability in the Government and that the introduction of the reforms 'have had a negative effect on governance' because departments are no longer necessarily have one political lead.[6] On 28 April 2022, the States voted to scrap the One Government scheme and return to Minister-led government departments by the end of the year.[7]
Group | Group Director |
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CEO and Head of Public Service | Suzanne Wiley |
Chief of Staff | Catherine Madden |
Communications | Dirk Danino-Forsyth |
External Relations | Kate Nutt |
The Office of the Chief Executive '[works] to support the Council of Ministers in delivering [the Government of] Jersey's long-term strategic objectives'. It answers to the Council of Ministers as a whole, however its primary Ministers are the Chief Minister, Minister for External Relations and Assistant Chief Minister for Communications. The department is structured into the –[8]
Group | Group Director |
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Director General | Ian Burns |
Customer Services | Sophie Le Sueur |
Customer Operations | Steve Jackson |
Local Services | Paul McGinnety |
Customer and Local Services' mission statement is 'CLS's priority is making it easy for customers'. Customer and Local Services is split into three directorates, two of which are split into 'Hubs' –[9]
The department is organised into four directorates –[10]
The department for the Economy was established on 1 January 2022 after splitting from the Office of the Chief Executive. The department is organised into four directorates –[11]
The Department of Health and Community Services is the department of the Minister for Health and Social Services. The department is organised into -[12]
The Department of Infrastructure, Housing and Environment manages national infrastructure and the regulation of Jersey's natural and built environment. It employs 678 people and has a £77 million budget, managing £1 billion in property assets. It is organised into four directorates:[13]
Justice and Home Affairs manages the island's law enforcement, emergency services, immigration and customs and health and safety services and laws.[14]
The department is split into a number of 'services':
Strategic Policy, Planning and Performance 'leads strategic policy, planning and performance to achieve the ambitions of Islanders for the future'.[15]
They are responsible for –
The department is divided into –
The States Treasury is divided into four teams -[15]
The Office aims ' to deliver effective public services through the provision of the appropriate people, technology, commercial and support arrangements; and to protect the organisation from external and internal threats to the provision of these services' –[15]
The Common Strategic Policy is the Government's high-level ambitions for the island.[16] As of 2023, the Government's proposed Common Strategic Policy consists of 'seven priorities for change':[17]
The strategic priorities for the 2018 to 2022 Government contained five strategic priorities, 8 common themes and 5 ongoing initiatives:[16]
Jersey is divided into 12 parishes, which are further divided into vingtaines (or, in St. Ouen, cueillettes), divisions that are historic. Today they are used chiefly for purposes of local administration and electoral constituency. Each parish has their own Assembly.