Moncloa Chief of Staff

Moncloa Chief of Staff
Director del Gabinete del
Presidente del Gobierno
Moncloa Palace's logo
since September 11, 2024
Office of the Prime Minister
StyleThe Most Excellent
Member ofCabinet Office
General Commission of Secretaries of State and Undersecretaries
National Security Council
Reports toThe Prime Minister
AppointerThe Monarch
FormationJuly 19, 1976 (1976-07-19)
First holderCarmen Díez de Rivera
DeputyMoncloa Deputy Chief of Staff
WebsiteLa Moncloa

The Moncloa Chief of Staff, officially called Director of the Prime Minister's Cabinet[a], is the most senior political appointee in the Office of the Prime Minister of Spain. The chief of staff, with the rank of secretary of state, is appointed by the Prime Minister as its senior aide. This position has no executive authority although it is the principal advisor to the prime minister and it coordinates the work action of the different government departments, as well as lead the Cabinet Office.

There is not a legal requirement for this role to exist but, since Adolfo Suárez in 1976, each prime minister has appointed a person of their trust to this role. The chief of staff chairs the Steering Committee of the Prime Minister's Office (Spanish: Comité de Dirección de la Presidencia del Gobierno), a body established in 2020 to "coordinate the advisory [bodies] and support the Prime Minister's Office activities" and it is integrated by all the high-ranking officials of the Office.[1]

Also, the chief of staff is a member of the General Commission of Secretaries of State and Undersecretaries and of the National Security Council—of which he is secretary.[2]

Role

In the case of Spain, the chief of staff is a political position held by people close to the prime minister,[3] but with less public relevance than their counterparts in the United States [White House Chief of Staff] or Germany [Head of the Federal Chancellery], among others,[4] since, in Spain, the chief of staff usually has an almost "invisible" role, not being part of the Council of Ministers, with few appearances in the press and, on many occasions, without accompanying the head of government at public events—with the exception of some such as Jorge Moragas—.[4]

Although initially the role of this position was not strictly regulated, it now has very well-defined functions outlined in the royal decrees that the prime minister approves at the beginning of each term to organize their working environment, that is, the Office of the Prime Minister. This regulatory evolution has been made possible by the evolution of the Prime Minister's Office itself, but it has always shared one common element: the chief of staff's power comes from what the prime minister chooses to grant them.[5]

Thus, the position has gone from having a minor regulation and the administrative rank of director-general during the premierships of Adolfo Suárez and Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo, to being a key player in matters as important as national security or crisis management since the premiership of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero,[6] reaching its highest level of authority during the premiership of Pedro Sánchez, who created a Steering Committee that place under the control of the chief of staff,[1] among other bodies, both the Secretariat of State for Press and the General Secretariat of the Prime Minister's Office—which had been under the chief of staff since 2017 and from which the chief of staff had been stealing responsibilities for some time—.[7] For this, the chief of staff currently constitutes the center of power of the Prime Minister's Office.

Cabinet Office

The chief of staff heads the Cabinet Office (or Prime Minister's Cabinet). As of 2026, the Cabinet Office is composed by:[2]

  • The Office of Moncloa Deputy Chief of Staff.
  • The General Secretariat of the Prime Minister's Office.
  • The General Secretariat for National Policy.
  • The General Secretariat for Institutional Relations and Citizens.
  • The Department for European Affairs.
  • The Department for Foreign Affairs.

List of chiefs of staff

Since the position was established, 13 people have served as such. Of these, only Carmen Díez de Rivera, its first holder, has been a woman. José Enrique Serrano Martínez is the only one to have held the position for two different terms, making him one of the longest-serving holders—eight and a half years—though not surpassing Roberto Dorado Zamorano, who held the position for 10 years, 228 days. José Luis Ayllón served the shortest term as head of the President's Cabinet, with 133 days in office.

# Name Term Prime Minister
1 Carmen Díez de Rivera[8][9] 1976–1977 Adolfo Suárez
2 Alberto Aza Arias 1977–1981
3 Eugenio Galdón Brugarolas 1981-1982 Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo
4 Roberto Dorado Zamorano 1982–1993 Felipe González
5 Antonio Zabalza Martí 1993–1995
6 José Enrique Serrano Martínez 1995–1996
7 Carlos Aragonés Mendiguchía 1996–2004 José María Aznar
8 José Enrique Serrano Martínez 2004–2011 José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero
9 Jorge Moragas Sánchez 2011–2017 Mariano Rajoy Brey
10 José Luis Ayllón[10] 2017–2018
11 Iván Redondo[11] 2018–2021 Pedro Sánchez
12 Óscar López Águeda[12] 2021–2024
13 Diego Rubio Rodríguez[13] 2024–pres.

List of deputy chiefs of staff

  1. Francisco Fernández Marugán (1982–1984)
  2. Ignacio Varela Díaz (1989–1995)
  3. Miquel Iceta (1995–1996)
  4. Gabriel Elorriaga Pisarik (1996–2000)
  5. Alfredo Timermans (2000–2002)
  6. Javier Fernández-Lasquetty (2002–2004)
  7. Enrique Guerrero Salom (2004–2008)
  8. José Miguel Vidal Zapatero (2008–2011)
  9. Alfonso de Senillosa (2011–2018)
  10. Cristina Ysasi-Ysasmendi Pemán (2018)
  11. Andrea Gavela Llopis (2018–2020)
  12. Francisco José Salazar Rodríguez (2020–2021)
  13. Llanos Castellanos (2021)
  14. Antonio Hernando (2021–2023)
  15. María José Pérez Ruiz (2023)
  16. Antonio Hernando (2023–2024)
  17. Ángel Alonso Arroba (since 2024)

References

  1. ^ a b Confidencial Digital (28 January 2020). "Sánchez crea un Comité de Dirección de la Presidencia con Iván Redondo al frente". Confidencial Digital (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  2. ^ a b Office of the Prime Minister (29 July 2025). "Real Decreto 676/2025, de 28 de julio, por el que se aprueba la estructura de la Presidencia del Gobierno". Official State Gazette. Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  3. ^ Garrido & Martínez (2018), pp. 97–98.
  4. ^ a b Garrido & Martínez (2018), p. 79.
  5. ^ Garrido & Martínez (2018), p. 80.
  6. ^ Office of the Prime Minister (20 April 2004). "Real Decreto 560/2004, de 19 de abril, por el que se reestructura la Presidencia del Gobierno". Official State Gazette (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 March 2026.
  7. ^ Garrido & Martínez (2018), p. 81.
  8. ^ "Carmen Díez de Rivera, directora del gabinete del presidente del Gobierno". El País (in Spanish). 1976-09-18. ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2018-11-24.
  9. ^ "Carmen Diez de Rivera, la musa de la transición | Mujeres Valientes". Mujeres Valientes (in European Spanish). 2015-10-05. Retrieved 2018-11-24.
  10. ^ Díez, Anabel (2018-01-23). "Rajoy nombra a José Luis Ayllón como jefe de Gabinete". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2018-11-24.
  11. ^ Agencias, El Periódico / (2018-06-07). "Iván Redondo, nuevo director del Gabinete del presidente del Gobierno". elperiodico (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-11-24.
  12. ^ "Iván Redondo sale del Gobierno y Pedro Sánchez sitúa a Óscar López como su nuevo jefe de Gabinete". ELMUNDO (in Spanish). 2021-07-10. Retrieved 2024-09-11.
  13. ^ "Diego Rubio, un historiador con carrera en la Moncloa, pero no en el PSOE, jefe de Gabinete en Presidencia". La Voz de Galicia (in Spanish). 2024-09-06. Retrieved 2024-09-11.

Bibliography

Notes

  1. ^ It is also commonly referred to as "Director of the Cabinet of the Office of the Prime Minister" (Spanish: Director del Gabinete de la Presidencia del Gobierno).