Three months after assuming office for the fifth time, Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba on Friday finally expanded his Cabinet after reaching a power-sharing agreement with his coalition partners.
Sixteen new ministers and two new state ministers were inducted to be later sworn in by President Bidya Devi Bhandari. The appointments were delayed by haggling over important ministerial portfolios between four of the five members of the coalition, and between factions within individual parties.
The Cabinet expansion triggered a widening controversy this week as news emerged that Chief Justice Cholendra SJB Rana wanted two of his nominees to also be given ministries. This raised objections from a cross-section of the media as well from within the legal fraternity and Prime Minister Deuba’s own Nepali Congress (NC).
Critics saw this as not just going against the accepted practice of not nominating unelected representatives to the Cabinet, but also because of what they characterised as a blatant violation of the doctrine of separation of powers.
In the end, Deuba only took in one of the candidates reportedly proposed by Chief Justice Rana: Gajendra Bahadur Hamal who is now Industry, Commerce and Supplies Minister.
Hamal is the brother-in-law of Chief Justice Rana, and has also been a long-standing NC member in western Nepal, but was not a MP in the federal Parliament. Rana refuted allegations that he had proposed Hamal’s ministership, but most analysts believe that he was exacting a pound of flesh for his landmark Supreme Court ruling in May that led to Deuba replacing K P Oli as prime minister.
The coalition partners have divided up the ministerial portfolios such that the NC has eight ministers, and the Maoist Centre (MC) has five, while Upendra Yadav’s JSP and Madhav Nepal’s UML Unified Socialist (US) have four ministers each. (See list, below)
The MC, US, and the JSP also have one state minister each.
The expansion had been delayed due to competing demands within members of the five-party alliance, including from the Ram Chandra Poudel faction of Deuba’s own NC, as well as factions within Nepal’s UML-US party.
And since this is going to be a coalition that will oversee elections in 2023, the parties all wanted influential ministries like home, foreign, communication, or those with the biggest budgets: education, agriculture, transport and physical infrastructure.
While the MC had already sent its list of recommended ministers to Deuba on Wednesday, and the UML-US had reached an internal agreement, the JSP and NC were still finalising their list of ministers till early Thursday.
Of the eight ministers from NC, Deuba has distributed the Law and Defence Ministries to Poudel loyalists: Dilendra Prasad Badu and Minendra Rijal respectively. Additionally, Uma Kanta Chaudhary from the NC’s Krishna Prasad Sitaula camp has been appointed Minister of Water Supply.
The NC had already taken Home, Foreign, and Law Ministries when Deuba took office three months ago. Now it also has Ministries of Communications and Information Technology, Women, Children and Senior Citizens, and Industry, Commerce and Supplies.
The MC had also reserved two powerful ministries for itself soon after joining the coalition in May: Janardan Sharma at finance, and Pampha Bhusal at energy. The Maoists have now added Devendra Poudel at the Education Ministry, Sashi Shrestha at Land Management.
The JSP has got the miniseries in agriculture, physical infrastructure and transport, forests and federal affairs.
Madhav Nepal’s UML-US, which joined the political alliance after Deuba’s controversial ordinance to amend the Political Parties Act allowed him to break away from former prime minister K P Oli’s UML, has the Health, Labour, Culture, Tourism and Urban Development Ministries.
Deuba later repealed the ordinance at great moral and political cost to make way for cabinet expansion because the move was seen to have bent the Constitution to fulfil his partisan interest.
Among the new ministers appointed today, none are from the senior leaders of the parties which have nominated their second-rung leaders. Pushpa Kamal Dahal of the MC, Madhav Kumar Nepal of the UML-US have already become prime ministers before, and Upendra Yadav of the JSP has been minister many times in previous coalitions. This also means that Deuba has not had to appoint anyone deputy prime minister for reasons of seniority.
Notable among the new ministers are the UML-US’ former firebrand student leader Ram Kumari Jhankri as Minister of Urban Planning. Besides her, four other ministers are women: the NC’s Uma Regmi Minister of Women and Children, Renu Yadav of the JSP as Minister of Physical Infrastructure and Transport, and the previously appointed Pampha Bhusal of the Maoist as Minister of Energy. And Sashi Shrestha of the RJM as Minister of Land Management.
List of Ministers:
Prime Minsiter: Sher Bahadur Deuba, NC
Home Ministry: Bal Krishna Khand, NC
Communication and Information Ministry: Gyanendra Bahadur Karki, NC
Energy, War and Irrigation: Pampha Bhusal, MC
Federal Affairs and Administration Ministry: Rajendra Prasad Shrestha, UML US
Health and Population Ministry: Birodh Khatiwada, UML-US
Finance Ministry: Janardan Sharma, MC
Defence Ministry, Minendra Rijal
Water Supply Ministry: Uma Kanta Chaudhary,
Foreign Ministry: Narayan Khadka, NC
Physical Infrastrucutre and Transport Ministry: Renu Yadav, JSP
Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation: Prem Bahadur Ale, UML-US
Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs Minister: Dilendra Prasad Bandi
Education Ministry: Devendra Poudel, MC
Agriculture Ministry: Mahendra Rai Yadav, JSP
Women, Children and Senior Citizens Ministry: Uma Regmi,
Urban Development Ministry: Ram Kumari Jhankri, UML-US
Industries Ministry: Gajendra Bahadur Hama NC (Uneleected)
Forests and Environment: Ram Sahaya Yadav, JSP
Land Management: Sashi Shrestha, MC
Labour Ministry: Krishna Kumar Shrestha, MC
Youth and Sports Ministry: Maheswar Jung Gahatraj, MC
State Ministers
PMO Office: Umesh Shrestha
Health Ministry: Bhawani Prasad Khapung
Education Ministry: Bodh Maya Kumari Yadav (MC)
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