The current decision-making framework and committee structure at the City of Toronto was established by the City of Toronto Act, 2006 and came into force January 1, 2007.[3] The decision-making process at the City of Toronto involves committees that report to City Council. Committees propose, review and debate policies and recommendations before their arrival at City Council for debate. Citizens and residents can only make deputations on policy at committees, citizens cannot make public presentations to City Council.[4] The mayor is a member of all committees and is entitled to one vote.
There are three types of committees at the City of Toronto: the executive committee, four other standing committees, and special committees of council.[5]
Executive committee
The executive committee is an advisory body chaired by the mayor.[6] The executive committee is composed of the mayor, deputy mayor, and the chairs of the four standing committees who are appointed by the mayor and three "at-large" members appointed by City Council. The role of the executive committee is to set the City of Toronto's priorities, manage financial planning and budgeting, labour relations, human resources, and the operation of City Council. The committee existed in the old City of Toronto beginning in 1969. Before that Toronto had a Board of Control, as did former cities North York and Etobicoke.
The executive committee makes recommendations to city council on:
Following the sudden decision by the provincial government to reduce the size of City Council in summer 2018, the committee structure went under review. Before December 1, 2018, there were eleven other committees that reported to Toronto City Council. As of the 2022-2026 term,[8] the four standing policy committees are:
Committee
Focus
Economic & Community Development
Social cohesion, and the economy, with a mandate to monitor and make recommendations on strengthening communities, neighbourhoods, businesses and the economy. Includes the work of the former Community Development & Recreation Committee, Economic Development Committee, and the licensing files from the former Licensing & Standards Committee.
Planning & Housing
Urban form and housing development, with a mandate to monitor and make recommendations on planning, property standards, growth, and housing development and services. Includes the work of the former Planning & Growth Management Committee, and the property standards files from the former Licensing & Standards Committee.
Infrastructure & Environment
Infrastructure and the natural environment, with a mandate to monitor and make recommendations on infrastructure needs and services, parks and forestry and the sustainable use of the environment. Includes the work of the former Public Works & Infrastructure Committee and Parks & Environment Committee.
General Government
Administrative operations of the City, with a mandate to monitor and make recommendations on the procurement and management of City government assets and resources. Includes the work of the former Government Management Committee.
There are five other committees that report to Council:
Committee
Focus
Audit Committee
Considers and recommends to Council the appointment of external auditors for the City and the Auditor General's office; the annual external audits of the financial statements of the city, its agencies and the Auditor General's office; the Auditor General's reports, audit plan and accomplishments.
Board of Health
Ensures that Toronto Public Health delivers programs and services in response to local needs; determines and sets public health policy and advises City Council on a broad range of health issues; recommendations with citywide or financial implications are forwarded to City Council for final approval.
Civic Appointments Committee
Considers and recommends to Council the citizens to appoint to agencies.
Budget Committee
Responsible for hearing public presentations and providing advice to the Mayor on the operating and capital budgets; and making recommendations to Council on any operating or capital budgets in which the Mayor has a pecuniary interest.
Striking Committee
Recommends councillor appointments to fill the positions of city boards, agencies and advisory committees; makes recommendations to Council on the meeting schedule for Council and Council Committees.
All members of Toronto City Council serve on a community council. Community councils report to City Council but they also have final decision-making power on certain items, such as front yard parking and appointments to local boards and Business Improvement Areas.[9] The city is divided into four community councils. Their meeting locations are as follows:
Vacancies in a councillor's seat may be filled in one of two ways, either by the holding of a by-election or through direct appointment of an interim councillor chosen by the council in an internal vote. Normally the council is allowed to decide which process to follow in each individual case; however, if the vacancy occurs after March 31 in the year of a regularly scheduled municipal election, then the vacancy must be filled by direct appointment as provincial law prohibits the holding of a by-election in the final six months of a council term.[citation needed]
Vacancies in the office of mayor must be filled by by-election unless the vacancy occurs after March 31 in an election year, in which case council appoints. There is no appointment option for mayoral vacancies before that time.
The process often results in public debate, however. The by-election process is widely seen as more democratic, while the appointment process is seen as less expensive for the city to undertake.[citation needed]
When the appointment process is followed, people who are interested in the appointment are asked to submit their names to the local community council for the area where the vacant seat is located; the community council then evaluates and interviews the applicants, and submits a recommendation to the full city council for a final vote. The full council can, however, reject the community council's recommendation and choose a different candidate instead; in 2013, for example, the city council passed over former member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) Chris Stockwell, the recommended candidate of the Etobicoke Community Council,[11] in favour of Peter Leon.
Usually, although there is no legal barrier to doing so, candidates for appointment are asked if they intend to run as a candidate in the next regular election, so that the appointed councillor does not gain an unfair incumbency advantage. Council cannot impose this restriction on appointees but nonetheless it usually factors into the debate. There have been instances in which appointed councillors have done so; most notably, Paul Ainslie did so in 2006 by running for re-election in a different ward than the one where he had been appointed,[12] and after the ward boundaries were adjusted in 2018, former ward 28 councillor Lucy Troisi ran in the new ward 13 against the former ward 27's elected incumbent Kristyn Wong-Tam. Peter Leon considered registering as a candidate in the 2014 election following his appointment as an interim councillor in 2013,[13] but ultimately did not do so.
If a full byelection is pursued, however, then the winner of that by-election is not barred from running in the next regular municipal election.[citation needed]
In the event of a vacancy in the mayor's office, the deputy mayor is immediately elevated to acting mayor on an interim basis until the permanent new mayor is selected in a by-election.[14] Unlike a city council seat, however, a by-election must always be held, unless the vacancy occurs less than 90 days before a regular municipal election. The situation does not trigger additional council vacancies, however; the deputy mayor is not deemed to have vacated their council seat during the acting period, and a sitting councillor who runs in the mayoral by-election does not have to resign their council seat unless they win the election.[citation needed]
Since amalgamation there are five instances that a councillor died while in office:
Frank Faubert - ward 16 councillor and former mayor of Scarborough died in 1999 (after about a year and a half into his council term). The seat was filled with by-election: filled by former Ward 43 councillor David Soknacki.
Rob Ford - ward 2 councillor and former mayor of Toronto died in 2016, one year and three months into his council term. The seat was filled with by-election: won by Ford's nephew and former Ward 1 public school trustee Michael Ford.
Ron Moeser - ward 44 councillor and former Scarborough councillor died on April 18, 2017. The seat filled by an appointment with former city staffer Jim Hart.
Pam McConnell - ward 28 councillor died on July 7, 2017, after being hospitalized for a health complication.[17][18] The vacancy was filled by voting by members of council, who selected Lucy Troisi over rival Michael Creek.
Jaye Robinson - ward 15 councillor died on May 16, 2024.[19] The by-election scheduled for November 4 was filled by former school trustee Rachel Chernos Lin over her nearest rival, former mayoral candidate Anthony Furey.[20]
Compensation
The Toronto Municipal Code, Chapter 223 sets the salary of the mayor and city councillors and is annually adjusted to the Consumer Price Index (CPI). In 2022, the salary of a councillor is $120,502.20 and the salary of the mayor is $202,948.20.[21]
Staff
City Clerk of Toronto
The city clerk is the senior administrative officer of the municipal government of Toronto. The city clerk is charged with building public trust and confidence in the city government.
There are five divisions in the Clerk's office:
Corporate Information Management Services
Member Services and Program Support
Elections Services
Strategic Protocol and External Relations
Secretariat
City clerk staff are seated in the diamond shaped table located in front of the speaker's podium in the council chambers.
Sergeant-at-Arms
City Council has a sergeant-at-arms, who is present at each council and committee meeting as per Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 27-50[22] to ensure order and safety of all members. In 2014 a second post was created to have two sergeants-at-arms present during council meetings. They are posted on the floor or near the entrances beside the speaker's desk.
History
Original ward system
Toronto was divided into a group of wards, each named after a Christian saint. In 1834, the city had five wards and the number of wards would expand to nine by 1891. While out of use for over a century, these ward names continue to appear in neighbourhood names and subway stations and, until the 1990s, provincial electoral districts.[23] The old wards and their boundaries in their final form, used from 1871 to 1891, were:
St. David's (named for Saint David) – bounded by Ontario, Don Mills Road (now Broadview Ave), Bloor and Queen
St. George's (named for Saint George) – bounded by King, Yonge, Dufferin Streets and lakefront
St. Lawrence's (named for Lawrence of Rome) – bounded by Queen, Yonge, lakefront, McGee
St. Patrick's (named for Saint Patrick) – bounded by Bloor, Bathurst, Queen and College Streets (now part of Trinity-Spadina) – St. Patrick's Church is located within this ward
St. John's (either for John the Apostle or John the Baptist) – bounded by Yonge, university, Bloor and Queen. The area would continue to be known as The Ward up to the mid-20th century.[24][25]
St. Stephen's (named for Saint Stephen) – bounded by Bathurst, Bloor, Queen and Dufferin Streets
St. Thomas's (named for Thomas the Apostle) – bounded by Jarvis, Ontario, Bloor, Queen Streets
By 1891, there were 13 wards, with three aldermen elected per ward: St. Alban's, St. Andrew's, St. David's, St. George's, St. James's, St. John's, St. Lawrence's, St. Mark's, St. Matthew's, St. Patrick's, St. Paul's, St. Stephen's, and St. Thomas's.[26]
When Yorkville was annexed in 1883, it became St. Paul's Ward (named for Paul the Apostle or Saint Paul). When Riverdale was annexed in 1884, it became St. Matthew's Ward (named for Matthew the Apostle or Saint Matthew). Brockton was also annexed in 1884, and it became the ward of St. Mark's (named for Mark the Evangelist or Saint Mark). When Parkdale was annexed in 1889, it became St. Alban's Ward (named for Saint Alban).
Post-1891 ward structure
In June 1891, the city approved a re-organization to Council changing the number of wards to six; each ward was known by a number.[27] Each ward elected four aldermen.[28] Over the next three decades three new wards were added, one each in the north, east, and west, as new areas were annexed to the City of Toronto. In 1896, the Board of Control executive branch of Council was established to handle all daily council business and report to Council. Mayor Robert John Fleming presided over the first Board of Control.[29]
Eventually, the numbers of aldermen was reduced to two aldermen per ward as the number of wards was increased. When a higher level of municipal government, Metro Toronto, was introduced in 1953, the alderman with the most votes of the two elected councillors from each ward was also a member of Metro Council.
Until 1955 municipal elections were held annually, either on New Year's Day or on the first Monday in December. In 1955 council moved to two-year terms, and in 1982 three-year terms were introduced. Along with the other municipalities of Ontario, Toronto moved to a four-year municipal term in 2006.
Starting in 1904 the Board of Control was elected directly. Until 1969 there was a four-person Board of Control in addition to city council. The board was elected at large across the city, and its members had considerably more power than the city councillors. In 1969, the Board of Control was abolished and the four controllers were replaced by four new councillors from two new wards. The ward map was rebalanced to give more equitable representation.
In 1985, the system of electing Metro councillors was changed so that two separate ballots were held in each ward, one for the city the other for Metro. In the next election, a separate set of wards was established for Metro councillors. Each Metro ward consisted of two city wards, each electing only one councillor.
With the amalgamation of the City of Toronto with the suburban municipalities of Metro in 1997, the councils of the six former cities were abolished. The new council for the "megacity" kept the ward map of Metro Toronto but doubled the number of councillors by adopting the system of electing two councillors from each ward. East York had only one ward and was thus greatly underrepresented. Former East York mayor Michael Prue lobbied successfully for a third councillor to be elected from that ward, and this was implemented mid-term.
This system was only used for the first megacity election. In 2000 a new ward map was devised based on the federal ridings (electoral districts) that covered Toronto. Each riding was split in half to create a 44-ward system.
List of ward changes 1909-1988
From 1892 until 1909 wards consisted of:
Ward 1 Riverdale
Ward 2 East Downtown and Rosedale
Ward 3 West Downtown and Summerhill
Ward 4 The Annex, Kensington Market and Garment District
Ward 5 Trinity-Bellwoods
Ward 6 Davenport and Parkdale
1910 Ward 7 West Toronto Junction added
1919 Ward 8 East Toronto added
1932 Ward 9 North Toronto added
1969 wards: new ward names; Wards 10 and 11 added
Ward 1 Swansea and Bloor West Village - formerly Riverdale
Ward 2 Parkdale and Brockton - formerly East Downtown and Rosedale
Ward 3 Davenport and Corsa Italia - formerly West Downtown and Summerhill
Ward 4 Trinity-Bellwoods Little Italy - formerly The Annex, Kensington Market and Garment District
Ward 5 The Annex and Yorkville - formerly Trinity-Bellwoods
Ward 6 Financial District, University of Toronto - formerly Davenport and Parkdale
Ward 7 Regent Park and Riverdale - formerly West Toronto Junction
Ward 8 Riverdale - formerly East Toronto
Ward 9 The Beaches - formerly North Toronto
Ward 10 Rosedale and North Toronto
Ward 11 Forest Hill and North Toronto
1988 wards: wards renamed; Wards 12 to 16 added
Ward 1 Swansea and Bloor West Village
Ward 2 Parkdale
Ward 3 Brockton
Ward 4 Trinity-Bellwoods and Little Italy
Ward 5 Financial District and University of Toronto
Ward 6 Downtown East
Ward 7 Regent Park and Cabbagetown
Ward 8 Riverdale
Ward 9 East Danforth
Ward 10 The Beaches
Ward 11 The Junction
Ward 12 Davenport and Corsa Italia
Ward 13 The Annex and Yorkville
Ward 14 Forest Hill
Ward 15 Western North Toronto
Ward 16 Davisville and Lawrence Park
Changes for 2006–10 Council
Changes were made to the council in 2007:
Executive Committee consisting of two city councillors and the six heads of the city committees (Policy and Finance, Administration, Planning and Transportation, Economic Development and Parks, Works, Community Services) Following the 2018 elections and the reduction in the size of Council, all committees are in the process of being restructured.
The current ward names are based on the federal and provincial electoral districts, but some no longer shared the same name as those district names have changed since 2000.
When the City of Toronto was incorporated in 1834, a city council was created. It provided direct representation in the government of Toronto to the population. The Town of York had been governed by the then-province of Upper Canada, with electoral representation in the Upper Canada assembly.[citation needed]
The first councils were elected yearly. Each of the five wards elected two aldermen and two common councillors by the votes of male householders.[30] The first councils were dominated by two factions: the Family Compact and its loyalists; and the reformers under the leadership of William Lyon Mackenzie, Member of Parliament for York.[31] Mackenzie won election to Council and was elected by Council as the city's first mayor, but was defeated in the next election, after proposing increased taxation.[32] After the defeat of the Upper Canada Rebellion in 1837, the reformers were marginalized, as several were executed for treason, and others, such as Mackenzie, went into exile.[citation needed]
For the next century, the Tories[clarification needed] dominated Toronto municipal politics, as they did the other levels in "Tory Toronto". The Tories were associated with staunch Protestantism, shown through membership in the Orange Order,[33] and support for the Lord's Day Act.[citation needed]
In the 1930s, various forms of left-wing opposition arose to the Tory-dominated council. The Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) was founded in 1932. The pro-labour social democratic party found support in various working-class areas of Toronto and several of its members were elected to city council. Unaffiliated anti-poverty activists like May Birchard also were elected to Council in this era. An important faction in Toronto politics in the 1930s and 1940s were the communists. There was considerable communist support in the downtown areas covered by Ward 4 and Ward 5, especially in the heavily Jewish areas of Kensington Market and the Garment District around Spadina Avenue and further west along College and up to Christie Pits including what is now Little Italy. The peak of communist influence was in the 1946 election when leader Stewart Smith was elected to the Board of Control and three other communists won seats on city council. With the beginning of the Cold War and staunch opposition from the other political groups, the communist presence quickly disappeared. The last communist alderman lost his seat in 1950.[citation needed]
The first part of the 20th century was the era of the newspaper slates. Each of the daily newspapers would endorse a full slate of candidates for office. The two most influential were the right-wing Toronto Telegram and the more left-leaning Toronto Daily Star. In the early parts of the century, the duelling papers ran the communications portion of the campaign of the candidates they supported, using yellow journalism to extol those they supported and denigrate those they opposed. The newspaper slates did not have a unified ideology: all the papers claimed to be seeking a balanced council, making sure that groups such as labour and Roman Catholics had representation on the council. Beyond these few exceptions, the slates of all the papers were largely made up of male, white, Conservative, Orangemen. Many candidates also appeared on the slates of several newspapers.[34] With the exception of James Simpson, who became Toronto's first socialist mayor in 1935, the city's mayors were Tories in the first half of the 20th century.[citation needed]
The character of Toronto politics began to change in the 1950s and 1960s as the Anglo Tory lock on power faded in the increasingly diverse city. In 1952, Orangeman Allan Lamport became the first Liberal elected mayor in over 40 years. He resigned to become TTC chair and his administration was implicated in a municipal corruption scandal.[35] In 1954, Leslie Saunders, another Orangeman became interim mayor. His staunch defence of Protestantism became an issue in the 1954 election. Nathan Phillips, a long-serving Jewish alderman, was elected mayor. He was a staunch Tory. His religion was an important issue in the election, in which his opponent proclaimed himself to be running as "Leslie Saunders, Protestant".[36] The Orange Order influence dropped sharply. Only seven of 23 councillors elected that year were members of the Orange Order.[37] Phillips was dubbed "Mayor of all the People" and governed in a non-partisan manner.[38] During his term, Phillips enraged the Order by accepting funding from O'Keefe Brewing for the new O'Keefe Centre auditorium.[39] In 1956, Phillips initiated the international architectural competition for a new City Hall.[40]
In 1966, former CCF Member of Provincial Parliament William Dennison was elected mayor. He was an Orangeman and the last member of the Orange Order to be a Toronto mayor.[38]
In the late 1960s and 1970s, a new division arose on city council between two groups that became known as the "Reformers" and the "Old Guard". Both groups crossed party lines and were divided by their approach to urban issues. The Reform faction arose in opposition to the urban renewal schemes that had been in favour in the previous decades. Two key battles were over the proposal for the Spadina Expressway and the replacement of the Trefann Court neighbourhood with a housing project.[41] The Reformers opposed the destruction of existing neighbourhoods and followed the urban theories of recent Toronto arrival Jane Jacobs. The Old Guard supported new highways and housing projects, in part because of their close ties to the development industry. The debate between the two groups became the central issue of the 1969 municipal election with mayoral candidate Margaret Campbell running on an explicit reform platform. Campbell lost the mayoralty, but on City Council, six veteran members of the Old Guard were defeated.[citation needed]
One example of the close ties was revealed in 1971; a conflict of interest case of alderman Ben Grys, who chaired the Buildings and Development Committee. His wife Gladys, bought properties in the High Park area, then resold them to a developer. Grys then helped get rezoning for the area to allow developers to increase the number of units they could build, without disclosing his interest.[42] Alderman John Sewell learned of the Grys purchases through a resident of the area. Grys launched a lawsuit against Sewell but it was dropped. Grys was defeated in 1972, the same election that Reformer David Crombie was elected mayor. Crombie was mayor until 1978 and during his term, the city enacted a holding by-law to curb the development industry. In 1978, Crombie was succeeded by Sewell as mayor.[citation needed]
In 1980, Liberal Art Eggleton was elected mayor. Eggleton was mayor until 1991. During his term, Council enacted a new official plan to control redevelopment within the city. Council approved the redevelopment of the railway lands south-west of downtown. Eggleton negotiated the agreement to administer Toronto Island Airport, allowing scheduled airlines, but disallowing jets. Social housing was built and environmental programs were introduced by the city during that period.[citation needed]
In 1998, the Metro Toronto Council was merged with Toronto City Council. The amalgamation added the councillors from the other cities of Metro. The first mayor of the merged council was Mel Lastman, former mayor of North York. The council spent the term working on merging the departments of the various municipalities and working on funding for the increased services downloaded by the province. In 2003, David Miller became Toronto mayor. A new City of Toronto Act was enacted by the Province of Ontario and Council used the opportunity to introduce new tax measures to increase revenues for city services. A planned bridge to the Island Airport was cancelled.[citation needed]
In 2010, Councillor Rob Ford won the mayoralty on promises to cut taxes. During his term, Council cancelled the vehicle registration tax, the Toronto transit plan, made various department 'essential services' and out-sourced some garbage pickup services. Council removed some of Ford's mayoral powers following the disclosures of Ford's drug abuse, giving powers to the deputy mayor. Although Ford ran for re-election, ill-health forced him to drop out. The mayoralty was won by John Tory, former leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservatives.[citation needed]
In 2017, after a petition to Council under the City of Toronto Act, Council initiated a process to revise its ward boundaries. The final result of the process was an increase to 47 seats. This was opposed in Court by several councillors, who ultimately failed in their challenge. In 2018, a newly elected Ontario government passed a bill, after the municipal election had started, to override the ward revisions and impose a 25-person council. This was overturned on September 10, 2018, after City Council and several private respondents challenged the law in Ontario Superior Court. The judge found that the Ontario government erred constitutionally in making the change during the election campaign, thus depriving voters and political candidates of their "freedom of expression" rights.[43] After this decision, the provincial government decided to appeal the judge's decision, and prepared a new version of the bill that would invoke the Notwithstanding clause to overrule the judge's decision. On September 19, 2018, a 3 court panel of the Court of Appeal for Ontario unanimously granted a stay on the lower court's ruling, thus setting the number of wards to 25,[44] and removing the need to invoke the Notwithstanding clause. The decision was ultimately upheld by the Supreme Court of Canada in Toronto (City) v Ontario (Attorney General).[citation needed]
Political families
William R. Allen - Metro Toronto's second chairman from 1962 to 1969, son of Robert A. Allen, an east-end Alderman and MPP in the 1930s
Michelle Holland - Formerly Michelle Berardinetti, Former Councillor for Ward 35, Scarborough Southwest, formerly married to Lorenzo Berardinetti, former Councillor and former MPP.
Rob Ford – as former mayor and councillor; brother Doug Ford, Jr. Premier of Ontario and former councillor; nephew Michael Ford who was the Councillor for Ward 2; Rob and Doug's father Doug Ford, Sr. was an Ontario MPP
Stephen Holyday - current city councillor for Ward 3, son of former Etobicoke alderman (1982-1985; 1988–1998), Metropolitan Toronto Councillor (1994-1997), Mayor of Etobicoke (1994-1998) and Toronto City Councillor for Ward 3 (1988-2000) and Ward 4 (2000-2013), and former MPPDoug Holyday
Olivia Chow – current Mayor, former city councillor and federal MP; wife of former city councillor and federal MP Jack Layton (also federal NDP leader and Leader of the Official Opposition); stepson Mike Layton also formerly served as city councillor
Sewell, John (2015). How we changed Toronto: the inside story of twelve creative, tumultuous years in civic life, 1969–1980. James Lorimer & Company. ISBN978-1-4594-0940-8.
Smyth, William J (2015). Toronto, the Belfast of Canada : the Orange Order and the shaping of municipal culture. University of Toronto Press. ISBN9781442614680.
^Sylvester, Erin (September 6, 2017). "Walking the Ward". The Torontoist. Retrieved October 9, 2020.
^"CLARKE IS STILL MAYOR: He Secures Another Lease of Office BUT HARDLY A VICTORY Ald. Macdonald Pulls Down the Old Majority", The Globe (1844-1936); Toronto, Ont. [Toronto, Ont]06 Jan 1891: 8.
1921 popular song Down YonderSheet music cover, 1921SongPublished1921Songwriter(s)L. Wolfe Gilbert Down Yonder is a popular American song with music and lyrics by L. Wolfe Gilbert. It was first published in 1921, and was introduced in the same year at the Orpheum Theater, New Orleans.[1] Gilbert had written the lyrics for the 1912 song Waiting for the Robert E. Lee (for which Lewis F. Muir wrote the music). In Down Yonder, Gilbert brought back four of the characters from the earlier s...
American politician (1815–1903) Senator Ramsey redirects here. For other uses, see Senator Ramsey (disambiguation). For the English footballer, see Alexander Ramsey (footballer). For people with a similar name, see Alexander Ramsay. Alexander RamseyChairman Utah CommissionIn officeMarch 1882 – 1885Succeeded byAmbrose B. Carlton34th United States Secretary of WarIn officeDecember 10, 1879 – March 5, 1881Preceded byGeorge W. McCrarySucceeded byRobert LincolnUnited States...
العلاقات التوفالية الكوبية توفالو كوبا توفالو كوبا تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات التوفالية الكوبية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين توفالو وكوبا.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية للدولتين: وجه المقارنة توفالو كوب...
Swedish politician (born 1957) Eskil ErlandssonMinister for Rural AffairsIn office5 October 2010 – 3 October 2014Prime MinisterFredrik ReinfeldtPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded bySven-Erik BuchtMinister for AgricultureIn office6 October 2006 – 5 October 2010Prime MinisterFredrik ReinfeldtPreceded byAnn-Christin NyqvistSucceeded byPosition abolishedMember of the Swedish Riksdag for Kronoberg CountyIn office3 October 1994 – 12 March 2019 Personal details...
Sports radio station in Burlington, New Jersey, serving Philadelphia This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: WPEN FM – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message) WPENBurlington, New JerseyBroadcast areaPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaFreque...
此條目需要补充更多来源。 (2021年7月4日)请协助補充多方面可靠来源以改善这篇条目,无法查证的内容可能會因為异议提出而被移除。致使用者:请搜索一下条目的标题(来源搜索:美国众议院 — 网页、新闻、书籍、学术、图像),以检查网络上是否存在该主题的更多可靠来源(判定指引)。 美國眾議院 United States House of Representatives第118届美国国会众议院徽章 众议院旗...
Overview of the foreign relations of Australia RG Casey House, Canberra, is the headquarters of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Foreign relations of Australia are influenced by its position as a leading trading nation and as a significant donor of humanitarian aid. Australia's foreign policy is guided by a commitment to multilateralism and regionalism, as well as to build strong bilateral relations with its allies. Key concerns include free trade, terrorism, refugees, economic co...
18th-century English Jacobite politician For other people named William Wyndham, see William Wyndham (disambiguation). The Right HonourableSir William WyndhamBtSir William Wyndham, 1713 portrait by Jonathon Richardson, National Portrait Gallery, LondonChancellor of the ExchequerIn office1713–1714Preceded bySir Robert BensonSucceeded bySir Richard OnslowSecretary at WarIn office1712–1713Preceded byGeorge GranvilleSucceeded byFrancis Gwyn Personal detailsBorn1688Died17 June 1740(1740-06-17)...
The Right HonourableThe Viscount TrenchardMC Minister of State for Defence ProcurementIn office5 January 1981 – 6 January 1983Prime MinisterMargaret ThatcherPreceded byThe Lord Strathcona and Mount RoyalSucceeded byGeoffrey PattieMinister of State for IndustryIn office6 May 1979 – 5 January 1981Prime MinisterMargaret ThatcherPreceded byEric HefferSucceeded byKenneth BakerMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalIn office10 February 1956 – 29 April 1987Precede...
Comune in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, ItalyTricesimo Tresesin (Friulian)ComuneComune di Tricesimo Coat of armsLocation of Tricesimo TricesimoLocation of Tricesimo in ItalyShow map of ItalyTricesimoTricesimo (Friuli-Venezia Giulia)Show map of Friuli-Venezia GiuliaCoordinates: 46°9′N 13°13′E / 46.150°N 13.217°E / 46.150; 13.217CountryItalyRegionFriuli-Venezia GiuliaProvinceUdine (UD)FrazioniAra Grande, Ara Piccola, Felettano, Fraelacco, Leonacco, Braidamatta, Col...
Si ce bandeau n'est plus pertinent, retirez-le. Cliquez ici pour en savoir plus. Cet article ne cite pas suffisamment ses sources (octobre 2015). Si vous disposez d'ouvrages ou d'articles de référence ou si vous connaissez des sites web de qualité traitant du thème abordé ici, merci de compléter l'article en donnant les références utiles à sa vérifiabilité et en les liant à la section « Notes et références ». En pratique : Quelles sources sont attendues ? C...
Grand Prix F1 Jepang 2004 merupakan balapan Formula 1 pada 10 Oktober 2004 di Suzuka Circuit. Lomba dimenangkan oleh Michael Schumacher.[1] Lomba Pos No Pembalap Tim Lap Waktu/Tersingkir Grid Poin 1 1 Michael Schumacher Ferrari 53 1:24'26.985 1 10 2 4 Ralf Schumacher Williams-BMW 53 +14.098 detik 2 8 3 9 Jenson Button BAR-Honda 53 +19.662 detik 5 6 4 10 Takuma Sato BAR-Honda 53 +31.781 detik 4 5 5 8 Fernando Alonso Renault 53 +37.767 detik 11 4 6 6 Kimi Raikkonen McLaren-Mercedes 53 +...
Menteri KoordinatorBidang Produksi dan Distribusi Republik IndonesiaBekas jabatan politikPejabat pertamaDadang Suprayogi (Bidang Produksi)Johannes Leimena (Bidang Distribusi)Pejabat terakhirHartarto SastrosoenartoPelantikPresiden IndonesiaJabatan dimulai6 Maret 1962Jabatan berakhir16 Maret 1998 No. Foto Nama Kabinet Dari Sampai Keterangan 1 Dadang Suprayogi Kabinet Kerja III 6 Maret 1962 13 November 1963 Bernama Menteri Koordinator Kompartemen Produksi membawahi1. Menteri Pertanian dan Agrari...
Waterfall in Kerala, IndiaManalar WaterfallsManalaar Waterfalls മണലാര് വെള്ളച്ചാട്ടംLocationKollam District, Kerala, IndiaCoordinatesKerala_scale:50000 9°4′2″N 77°10′53″E / 9.06722°N 77.18139°E / 9.06722; 77.18139TypeSegmentedNumber of drops1WatercourseAchankovil River Manalar Waterfalls is situated at Achankovil in Kollam district of Kerala. It is on the eastern area of Kollam District and Konni forest. Manalar Wat...
لمعانٍ أخرى، طالع دار أوبرا (توضيح). دار أوبرا سيدنيSydney Opera House (بالإنجليزية) معلومات عامةنوع المبنى مجمع فنونالمكان سيدني[2][3] — City of Sydney (en) العنوان 2 Circular Quay East, Sydney NSW (بالإنجليزية)[2] المنطقة الإدارية City of Sydney (en) البلد أستراليا[2][3][4] بني بطلب...
Flemish painter In this Dutch name, the surname is Van Noort, not Noort. Adam van Noort by Anthony van Dyck Adam van Noort (1561/62 – 1641) was a Flemish painter and draughtsman and one of the teachers of Peter Paul Rubens, and the only teacher of Jacob Jordaens. Adam van Noort was mainly known for his history paintings but he also created some portraits.[1] He was a designer for engravings for the Collaert family of printmakers and publishers.[2] Life Adam van Noort was...
Overview of the electoral system of the Soviet Union 1950 postage stamp marking that year's election The electoral system of the Soviet Union was varying over time, being based upon Chapter XIII of the provisional Fundamental Law of 1922, articles 9 and 10 of the 1924 Constitution and Chapter XI of the 1936 Constitution, with the electoral laws enacted in conformity with those. The Constitution and laws applied to elections in all Soviets, from the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union, the Unio...