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. In practice, this is normally the leader of the largest political party or coalition in the house. If there is no clear majority in the House of Representatives, however, the President's role becomes more important: he or she must assume the role of arbitrator and open negotiations with the leaders of the various political parties, in the hope of finding someone whom a majority will accept as Prime Minister. In the event of that failing to take place, the President must dissolve the House of Representatives and call an early election.


THE MULTI-PARTY CABINET PROVISION

Cabinet Ministers are formally appointed by the President, but he is constitutionally required to do so only on the advice of the Prime Minister. An unusual feature of the Fijian Constitution is its provision for a compulsory coalition cabinet - even if one party has a parliamentary majority in its own right. Every political party with more than 8 seats in the 71-member parliament must be offered a proportionate number of cabinet posts. If the Prime Minister wishes to give cabinet posts to members of a party with fewer than 8 representatives, he must do so at the expense of his own party, not of other parties in the coalition. This provision was written into the 1997 Constitution with a view to forcing Fiji's Political Parties , which represented ethnic communities for the most part, to cooperate rather than compete for absolute power. In adopting this novel feature, Fijians noted that a similar system has been operating successfully in Switzerland for decades. More recently, it has been tried (with far less success) in Northern Ireland .


Problems with the model

The multi-party cabinet model has never been successfully maintained in Fiji, however. The Chaudhry government refused to include the Fijian Political Party in the 1999 - 2000 cabinet, despite the party's holding the required 8 parliamentary seats. Then following the Election Of 2001 , Mahendra Chaudhry , the leader of the Fiji Labour Party , was involved in litigation against the Prime Minister , Laisenia Qarase , on the grounds that Qarase had unconstitutionally refused to include the Labour Party in the Cabinet. On 18 July , 2003 , Fiji's Supreme Court ruled that the exclusion of the Labour Party was in breach of the Constitution , and demanded that the situation be rectified. Amid appeals, counter-appeals, and negotiations, the situation had still not been resolved as of June 2004 , when the Supreme Court handed down a further ruling that the Labour Party was entitled to 14 out of 30 posts in the Cabinet. Qarase announced that he would abide by the ruling and would appoint enlarge the Cabinet to include the requisite number of Labour Party ministers, but not Chaudhry himself. This continued to stall negotiations, until late November 2004 , when Chaudhry announced that the Labour Party had decided to remain in opposition for the remainder of the present parliamentary term, which is due to expire on 11 September 2006 at the latest.


Calls for amendments

On 16 December 2004 , Prime Minister Qarase announced that he would try to get Mahendra Chaudhry's agreement to amend the constitution to abolish the multi-party cabinet rule, which he called "ridiculous," and replace it with a requirement for the cabinet to be "multi-ethnic." This would require a change to Qarase's own cabinet, which at present contains only one Indo-Fijian and only two non- Indigenous Fijians .

Qarase reiterated his calls for a change to the constitution on 5 October 2005 , and indicated that he would contest the 2006 Election on such a platform. Speaking on VitiFm Radio , Qarase said that the multi-party Cabinet provisions of the constitution were unworkable and contrary to democratic principles. ''"Fiji should change to true democratic rule whereby whoever wins the elections governs, instead of being forced to work in a Cabinet with others of different views, beliefs and ideas on how to run the Government. The result will be an unworkable Cabinet,"'' Qarase said. The provision had been hastily added to the Constitution as an afterthought, he said, and had not been given due consideration. Only three other countries had ever tried the model, none of them successfully, he claimed. ''"We want a stable government that can govern well and is not shaky,"'' he concluded.

Qarase repeated his calls for amendments on 23 December 2003 . Changing the constitutional provision for a multi-party Cabinet to a multi-ethnic one, he told the Fiji Village news service on 23 December , would guarantee equitable representation to all ethnic communities without requiring the government to compromise with ideologically opposite parties.


MEMBERSHIP

As of February 2006 , the Cabinet was as follows.









  • {Link without Title} On 20 September 2005 , Simione Kaitani relinquished his Transport and Civil Aviation portfolio, to join the Prime Minister's Office as a Minister without portfolio.