Home | Political post | President of Trinidad and Tobago
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Under the 1976 Constitution, the President is the nominal/de jure source of executive power. Like the British Sovereign (and heads of state in other Westminster Systems), he "reigns but does not rule". In practice, executive authority is exercised by the Prime Minister and his Cabinet, on behalf of the President. The President appoints as Prime Minister the leader of the largest party in the House of Representatives, and also appoints members of the Senate on the recommendation of the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition. The President must be at least 35 years old (although no President has been younger than 59), a citizen of Trinidad and Tobago, and at the time of nomination must have been resident in the country for an unbroken period of ten years. The current President of Trinidad and Tobago is Professor Emeritus George Maxwell Richards. The official residence of the President is President's House, previously used by the Governors-General of the islands. |