King's commissioner

Summary

The King's commissioner (Dutch: Commissaris van de Koning, abbreviated to CvdK) is the head of a province in the Netherlands. The officeholder chairs both the States Provincial (directly elected provincial legislature) and the Provincial Executive (executive branch), but has a right to vote only in the latter. When the reigning monarch is a female, the office is known as Queen's commissioner (Commissaris van de Koningin). As there are twelve provinces in the Netherlands, there are twelve King's commissioners.

LimburgZeelandZeelandZeelandZeelandZeelandGelderlandSouth HollandSouth HollandNorth HollandNorth HollandNorth HollandNorth HollandUtrechtFlevolandFlevolandOverijsselDrentheGroningen (province)Groningen (province)Groningen (province)FrieslandFrieslandFrieslandFrieslandFrieslandFrieslandFrieslandNorth BrabantSint EustatiusSint EustatiusSabaSabaBonaireBonaireBonaire
Clickable image of provinces of the Netherlands

There are two levels of local government in the Netherlands: the provinces and the municipalities. The twelve provinces form the tier of administration between central government and the municipalities. The three tiers are organised in largely the same way, with a directly elected legislature, which in turn chooses the executive branch, headed by an appointed chairman. At the national and municipal levels, these are the King and the Mayor; at the provincial level it is the King's commissioner.

Tasks of the King's commissioner edit

The King's Commissioner is not elected by the residents of the province, but appointed by the Dutch Crown (the ministers, presided over by the monarch), for a term of six years, renewable. The King's Commissioner can be dismissed only by the Dutch Crown. When a vacancy arises, the provincial council gives the Minister of the Interior a profile of the kind of candidate it would like to see in the job. Although all King's Commissioners are prominent members of one or another of the major national political parties, they are expected to be politically impartial while they are in office.

The King's Commissioners play a role within the provincial administration and are the official representatives of central government in the provinces. They coordinate disaster management and prevention and pay regular official visits to the municipalities in their region.

The King's Commissioners play an important part in the appointment of municipal mayors. When a vacancy arises, the King's Commissioner first asks the municipal council for its views as to a successor, then writes to the Minister of the Interior, recommending a candidate. Since the King's Commissioners are both the chairs and full members of the provincial executives, they may include some of the executive's tasks in their portfolio. They also oversee the official apparatus[clarification needed] and any provincial utilities and represent the province in its dealings with business.

Naming practice in Limburg edit

In the Dutch province of Limburg, the King's Commissioner is usually informally called Gouverneur ("governor"), as in Belgium. Similarly, the Provinciehuis ("Province Hall") at Maastricht is called Gouvernement ("Governor's Residence"). This local custom arose from the particular status of the province in the nineteenth century. The official name of the office is currently the same as in the other provinces.

List of current King's commissioners edit

Province King's commissioner Party Serving since Previous office
Drenthe   Jetta Klijnsma
(born 1957)
Labour Party 1 December 2017
(6 years, 144 days)
State Secretary for
Social Affairs
and Employment
Flevoland   Arjen Gerritsen
(born 1970)
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy 1 November 2023
(174 days)
Mayor of Almelo
Friesland   Arno Brok
(born 1968)
People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy
1 March 2017
(7 years, 53 days)
Mayor of Dordrecht
Gelderland   John Berends
(born 1956)
Christian
Democratic Appeal
6 February 2019
(5 years, 77 days)
Mayor of Apeldoorn
Groningen   René Paas
(born 1966)
Christian
Democratic Appeal
18 April 2016
(8 years, 5 days)
Member of the Social
and Economic Council
Limburg   Emile Roemer
(born 1962)
Socialist Party 1 December 2021
(2 years, 144 days)
Acting Mayor of Alkmaar
North Brabant   Ina Adema
(born 1968)
People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy
1 October 2020
(3 years, 205 days)
Mayor of Lelystad
North Holland   Arthur van Dijk
(born 1963)
People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy
1 January 2019
(5 years, 113 days)
Member of the Social
and Economic Council
Overijssel   Andries Heidema
(born 1962)
Christian Union 11 July 2018
(5 years, 287 days)
Mayor of Deventer
South Holland   Jaap Smit
(born 1957)
Christian
Democratic Appeal
1 January 2014
(10 years, 113 days)
Member of the Social
and Economic Council
Utrecht   Hans Oosters
(born 1962)
Labour Party 1 February 2019
(5 years, 82 days)
Dijkgraaf
Zeeland   Han Polman
(born 1963)
Democrats 66 1 March 2013
(11 years, 53 days)
Mayor of
Bergen op Zoom

Source:[1]

See also edit

  • Category:Lists of King's and Queen's Commissioners in the Netherlands
  • Lord-lieutenant

References edit

  1. ^ "Overzicht commissarissen van de Koning per februari 2022". rijksoverheid.nl (in Dutch). February 2022. Retrieved 17 March 2022.