Cabinet of South Australia
| Cabinet overview | |
|---|---|
| Formed | 1856 |
| Type | Committee of the Executive Council |
| Jurisdiction | South Australia |
| Headquarters | Cabinet Room, 200 Victoria Square, Adelaide |
| Ministers responsible |
|
| Cabinet executive |
|
| Website | dpc |
The Cabinet of South Australia is the chief policy-making organ of the Government of South Australia. In South Australia, the cabinet is interchangeably known as the ministry as there is no "outer ministry" โ therefore all ministers are in cabinet. The current fifteen-member cabinet, the Malinauskas ministry, is headed by Premier Peter Malinauskas of the South Australian Labor Party.[1]
Composition of ministry
| Party | Portfolio | Minister | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labor | Peter Malinauskas MP | |||
| Labor |
|
Kyam Maher MLC | ||
| Labor |
|
Tom Koutsantonis MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Chris Picton MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Katrine Hildyard MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Clare Scriven MLC | ||
| Labor |
|
Blair Boyer MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Joe Szakacs MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Nick Champion MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Emily Bourke MLC | ||
| Labor |
|
Rhiannon Pearce MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Lucy Hood MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Michael Brown MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Nadia Clancy MP | ||
| Labor |
|
Alice Rolls MP | ||
See also
References
- ^ Bermingham, Kathryn (25 March 2026). "South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas announces new cabinet ministers in major reshuffle". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. ABC News. Retrieved 25 March 2026.
External links
- "Cabinet of South Australia". Department of Premier and Cabinet. Government of South Australia. 22 March 2018. Archived from the original on 29 January 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2018.