First Perrottet ministry

First Perrottet ministry

98th Cabinet of New South Wales
photograph of Perrottet
Dominic Perrottet
photograph of Toole
Paul Toole
Date formed5 October 2021
Date dissolved21 December 2021
People and organisations
MonarchQueen Elizabeth II
GovernorMargaret Beazley
PremierDominic Perrottet
Deputy PremierPaul Toole
Total no. of members21
Member partyLiberalNational Coalition
Status in legislatureMinority Coalition Government[1]
Opposition partyLabor
Opposition leaderChris Minns
History
PredecessorSecond Berejiklian ministry
SuccessorSecond Perrottet ministry

The First Perrottet ministry or First Perrottet–Toole ministry was the 98th ministry of the Government of New South Wales, and was led by Dominic Perrottet, the state's 46th Premier.

The LiberalNational coalition ministry was formed following the resignation of the previous Premier, Gladys Berejiklian and the election of Perrottet as leader of the Liberal Party on 5 October 2021. Stuart Ayres was elected as deputy party leader. Separate to the Liberal Party leadership election, the National Party also had its own leadership election on 6 October 2021, following the resignation of John Barilaro as party leader, who said it was "the right time for me to hand the reins over".[2] Paul Toole was elected as National Party leader and subsequently replaced Barilaro as Deputy Premier of New South Wales.[3][4]

The ministry was largely unchanged from the previous Berejiklian ministry as Perrottet opted not to reshuffle the cabinet yet. The ministry continued until the major cabinet reshuffle on 21 December 2021 when the Second Perrottet ministry was sworn in. The Parliament of New South Wales considers the second ministry to be a separate and new ministry from the first.[5]

  1. ^ "Party Representation". Parliament of New South Wales. State of New South Wales. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  2. ^ Tsikas, Mick (3 October 2021). "John Barilaro resigns as NSW Deputy Premier, will also leave Parliament". ABC News. AAP. Retrieved 3 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Paul Toole wins NSW Nationals leadership vote, becomes new Deputy Premier". ABC News. 6 October 2021. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
  4. ^ "Part 6 Ministries since 1856" (PDF). NSW Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  5. ^ "NSW Parliamentary Record - Part 6 : Ministries 1856 to the present" (PDF). Parliament of New South Wales. 28 March 2022. Retrieved 28 March 2022.

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