Thursday, January 3, 2019

Cabinet of the Kingdom of Hawaii

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Cabinet of the Kingdom of Hawaii

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The '''Cabinet of the Kingdom of Hawaii''' was a body of the top executive officials appointed to advise the sovereign of the [[Kingdom of Hawaii]] from 1845 to 1893. The subsequent regimes of the [[Provisional Government of Hawaii|Provisional Government]] and the [[Republic of Hawaii]] retained the structure of the cabinet and minister positions under the presidency of [[Sanford B. Dole]] from 1893 until 1898.

==History==
Prior to 1845, the king was advised by the [[Kuhina Nui]] (premier) and his [[Council of Chiefs of Hawaii|Council of Chiefs]] (ʻAha [[Aliʻi]]). The first commission of a cabinet-level was to American missionary [[Gerrit P. Judd]] who was appointed Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs on November 2, 1843 by [[Kamehameha II]]. An 1844 issue of ''The Polynesian'' noted the positions of Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Attorney General, and two Secretaries of the Treasury in the Privy Council of State.
By 1845, the positions became known as ministers. Judd had "in fact, though not in name, a prime minister holding three portfolios", acting out the duties of the ministers of foreign affairs, finance and of the interior. He was later replaced as finance minister by [[Robert Crichton Wyllie]] appointed interior minister on March 28, 1845 to alleviate his duties. Kamehameha III increasingly relied on foreigners to fill executive council posts.

The cabinet with five ministries was officially formed after the passing of "An Act to Organize the Executive Ministry of the Hawaiian Islands" on October 29, 1845 in the Legislature, which formally outlined the appointment of cabinet ministers for the executive branch and the role of a privy council. The members of the cabinet consisted of the [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Hawaii)|Minister of Foreign Affairs]], [[Ministry of the Interior (Hawaii)|Minister of the Interior]] (combined with the position of Kuhina Nui until 1855), [[Ministry of Finance (Hawaii)|Minister of Finance]], and [[Attorney General of Hawaii|Attorney General]]. The royal cabinet ministers were also ex-officio members of the House of Nobles in the legislature and the Privy Council of State, the executive council of the monarch. Until 1855, a fifth ministry was headed by the [[Ministry of Public Instruction (Hawaii)|Minister of Public Instruction]]. This was reorganized into Board of Education which reported to the legislature through the interior ministry. The first cabinet appointed after the organic acts included Judd (as finance minister), Wyllie (as foreign ministers), [[John Ricord]] (as attorney general), and [[William Richards (Hawaii)|William Richards]] (as public instruction minister) and the part-Hawaiian [[Keoni Ana]] (Kuhina Nui and interior minister) to fill the post of his council.The

Subsequent Hawaiian constitutions in [[1852 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii|1852]], [[1864 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii|1864]] and [[1887 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii|1887]] outlined the role and duties of the cabinet ministry. The 1864 constitution proclaimed by King [[Kamehameha V]] abolished the position of Kuhina Nui and its role as the head of the cabinet. During the later years of the monarchy, the stability of cabinet appointments came into question with the appointment of questionable or unpopular candidates such as [[Celso Cesar Moreno]] and [[Walter Murray Gibson]] by King [[Kalākaua]]. Cabinets in this era were named after the de-factor heads, usually but not always the foreign minister. The 1887 constitution forced upon Kalākaua increased the power of the cabinet (then known as the [[Reform Party (Hawaii)|Reform Cabinet]]) at the expense of the monarch who had to have the cabinet's consent for all executive actions except ministerial appointments and vetos of legislations. It retained the monarch's right to appoint his or her own cabinet minister but gave the legislature the power to vote for the dismissal of the cabinet.

This constitution change proved especially problematic in the [[1892 Legislature of the Kingdom of Hawaii|1892–1893 legislative session]] where the retention of a stable cabinet was the main issue of contention between Queen [[Liliʻuokalani]] and the legislators. Seven resolutions of want of confidence were introduced during this session, and four of her self-appointed cabinets (the [[Hermann A. Widemann|Widemann]], [[Edward C. Macfarlane|Macfarlane]], [[William H. Cornwell|Cornwell]], and [[George Norton Wilcox|Wilcox]] cabinets) were ousted by votes of the legislature.<ref></ref> On January 13, 1893, after the legislature dismissed the Wilcox cabinet, Liliʻuokalani appointed the new Parker cabinet consisting of [[Samuel Parker (Hawaii)|Samuel Parker]], as minister of foreign affairs; [[John F. Colburn]], as minister of the interior; [[William H. Cornwell]], as minister of finance; and [[Arthur P. Peterson]], as attorney general.<ref>; </ref>
These men had been specifically to support her plan of promulgating a new constitution while the legislature was not in session. She attempted to promulgate a [[Proposed 1893 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii|new constitution]], but the cabinet ministers were either opposed to or reluctant to sign the new constitution. Their opposition was one of the causes which ultimately led to the [[Overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii]] on January 17, 1893.

== See also ==
*[[Privy Council of the Kingdom of Hawaii]]
*[[Legislature of the Kingdom of Hawaii]]
*[[Supreme Court of the Kingdom of Hawaii]]

== References ==


== Bibliography ==

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[[Category:Kingdom of Hawaii]]
[[Category:Hawaii law]]
[[Category:Members of the Cabinet of the Kingdom of Hawaii| ]]
[[Category:1845 establishments in Hawaii]]
[[Category:1893 disestablishments in Hawaii]]

January 04, 2019 at 05:21AM

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