President of the Balearic Islands | |
---|---|
President/Presidenta del Govern de les Illes Balears | |
since 7 July 2023 | |
Style | Molt Honorable Senyor/a |
Residence | Consulate of the Sea, Palma, Mallorca |
Nominator | Parliament of the Balearic Islands |
Appointer | The Monarch countersigned by the Prime Minister |
Term length | 4 years |
Inaugural holder | Gabriel Cañellas 8 June 1983 |
The president of the Balearic Islands is the head of government of the Balearic Islands, one of the 17 autonomous communities of Spain, while the monarch Felipe VI remains the head of state as King of Spain (and therefore of the Balearic Islands).
Governments:
|
Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) |
Term of office | Party | Government Composition |
Election | Monarch (Reign) |
Ref. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Duration | ||||||||
Jeroni Albertí (1927–2024) |
30 July 1977 |
24 July 1978 |
5 years and 59 days | UCD | Albertí I Pre-autonomous UCD • PSOE • AP |
N/A | King Juan Carlos I (1975–2014) |
[1] [2] [3] | ||
24 July 1978 |
4 May 1979 |
Albertí II Pre-autonomous UCD • PSOE • AP | ||||||||
4 May 1979 |
27 September 1982 |
Albertí III Pre-autonomous UCD • PSOE • AP • PCIB • PSM • PSMe | ||||||||
During this interval, Vice President Francesc Tutzó served as acting officeholder. | [4] [5] | |||||||||
Francesc Tutzó (born 1940) |
22 November 1982 |
9 June 1983 |
199 days | UCD / Indep. |
Tutzó Pre-autonomous UCD • PSOE • AP • PCIB • PSM • PSMe | |||||
Gabriel Cañellas (born 1941) |
9 June 1983 |
22 July 1987 |
12 years and 53 days | AP | Cañellas I AP • PDP • UL |
1983 | [6] [7] [8][9] [10] | |||
22 July 1987 |
1 July 1991 |
Cañellas II (AP • PL) until Jan 1989 PP from Jan 1989 UM |
1987 | |||||||
PP | ||||||||||
1 July 1991 |
1 July 1995 |
Cañellas III PP • UM |
1991 | |||||||
1 July 1995 |
1 August 1995 |
Cañellas IV PP |
1995 | |||||||
Cristòfol Soler (born 1956) |
1 August 1995 |
18 June 1996 |
322 days | PP | [11] | |||||
Jaume Matas (born 1956) |
18 June 1996 |
27 July 1999 |
3 years and 39 days | PP | Matas I PP |
[12] | ||||
Francesc Antich (born 1958) |
27 July 1999 |
27 June 2003 |
3 years and 335 days | PSIB–PSOE | Antich I PSOE • PSM–EN • EU • EV |
1999 | [13] | |||
Jaume Matas (born 1956) |
27 June 2003 |
6 July 2007 |
4 years and 8 days | PP | Matas II PP |
2003 | [14] | |||
Francesc Antich (born 1958) |
6 July 2007 |
18 June 2011 |
3 years and 346 days | PSIB–PSOE | Antich II PSOE • PSM • IV from Jul 2010 EUIB until Jul 2010 UM until Feb 2010 ERC until Dec 2009 |
2007 | [15] | |||
José Ramón Bauzá (born 1970) |
18 June 2011 |
2 July 2015 |
4 years and 14 days | PP | Bauzá PP |
2011 | [16] | |||
King Felipe VI (2014–present) | ||||||||||
Francina Armengol (born 1971) |
2 July 2015 |
29 June 2019 |
7 years and 353 days | PSIB–PSOE | Armengol I PSOE • Més • MpM until Apr 2017 |
2015 | [17] [18] | |||
29 June 2019 |
20 June 2023 |
Armengol II PSOE • UP • Més |
2019 | |||||||
During this interval, Minister Mae de la Concha served as acting officeholder. | [19] | |||||||||
Marga Prohens (born 1982) |
7 July 2023 |
Incumbent | 1 year and 137 days | PP | Prohens PP |
2023 | [20] |