Daftar Gubernur Jenderal Papua Nugini: Perbedaan antara revisi

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The '''Governor-General of Papua New Guinea''' is the [[Viceroy|viceregal]] representative of [[Elizabeth II|Queen Elizabeth II]], known in [[Tok Pisin]] as 'Missis Kwin', [[Papua New Guinea]]'s [[head of state]], performing the duties of the [[Monarchy of Papua New Guinea|Queen]] in her absence. The current [[Governor-General]] of Papua New Guinea is [[Michael Ogio]].
 
== Appointment ==
Unlike other [[Commonwealth realm]]s, the Governor-General of Papua New Guinea is nominated by the country's [[National Parliament of Papua New Guinea|Parliament]], rather than by its [[Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea|Prime Minister]], as is the convention almost everywhere else. The appointment is made by the Head of State of Papua New Guinea, Queen Elizabeth II, following a simple majority vote of the [[National Parliament of Papua New Guinea|National Parliament]]. For a second term, a two-thirds majority is required. No person may serve for more than two terms.
 
If the office of Governor-General becomes vacant, the [[Speaker (politics)|Speaker]] of the National Parliament becomes acting Governor-General until a new appointment is made.
 
== Dismissal ==
The Governor-General may be dismissed by either a decision of the [[National Executive Council of Papua New Guinea|National Executive Council]] or an absolute majority of the National Parliament. No Governor-General has been dismissed from office, although Sir [[Serei Eri]] resigned from office, due to his dismissal being instructed to the Queen by Prime Minister [[Rabbie Namaliu]].
 
== Governors-General of Papua New Guinea ==
 
Names in white indicate the Speaker acting as the Governor-General.
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!Notes
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 1|| Sir [[John Guise]] || 6 September 1975 – March 1, 1977||rowspan="12"|Queen Elizabeth II||Resigned from office to contest election.
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 2|| Sir [[Tore Lokoloko]] || 1 March 1977 – 1 March 1983||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 3|| Sir [[Kingsford Dibela]] || 1 March 1983 – 1 March 1989||Resigned from office.
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 4|| Sir [[Ignatius Kilage]] || 1 March 1989 – 31 December 1989||Died in office.
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 5|| Sir [[Serei Eri]] || 27 February 1990 – 4 October 1991||Resigned from office, due to dismissal instructed to the Queen by Prime Minister.
|-
|| || [[Dennis Young (Papua New Guinea politician)|Dennis Young]] || 4 October 1991 – 18 November 1991||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 6|| Sir [[Wiwa Korowi]] || 18 November 1991 – 20 November 1997|| |
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 7|| Sir [[Silas Atopare]] || 20 November 1997 – 20 November 2003|| |
|-
|| || Sir [[William Skate]] || 21 November 2003 – 28 May 2004||Removed from Speaker's role (and hence acting Governor-General) due to financial misappropriation scandal
|-
|| || [[Jeffrey Nape]] || 28 May 2004 – 29 June 2004 || Replaced Bill Skate as Speaker and hence acting Governor-General
|- style="background:#EEEEEE;"
|| 8 || Sir [[Paulias Matane]] || 29 June 2004 – 13 December 2010 || Elected by Parliament 50 votes - 46 on May 27, 2004.
|-
|| || [[Jeffrey Nape]] || 13 December 2010 – 20 December 2010||
|-
|| 9 || [[Michael Ogio]] || 20 December 2010 – ||
|}