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Commonwealth Secretary-General

Head of the Commonwealth Secretariat


Head of the Commonwealth Secretariat

FieldValue
postSecretary-General
bodythe
Commonwealth of Nations
flagsize175px
flagcaptionFlag
imageFile:Shirley Ayorkor Botchway.jpg
imagesize200px
incumbentShirley Ayorkor Botchwey
incumbentsince1 April 2025
styleHer Excellency
residenceGarden House
appointerCommonwealth Heads of Government
termlengthFour years
renewable once
inauguralArnold Smith
website

Commonwealth of Nations renewable once

The Commonwealth secretary-general, formally the secretary-general of the Commonwealth of Nations, is the head of the Commonwealth Secretariat, the central body which has served the Commonwealth of Nations since its establishment in 1965, and responsible for representing the Commonwealth publicly. The Commonwealth secretary-general should not be confused with the head of the Commonwealth.

Role

The position was created, along with the Secretariat itself, after the fourteenth Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference in London in 1965, issued a memorandum describing the role of the Secretary-General:

The headquarters of the secretary-general, as with the Secretariat generally, is Marlborough House, a former royal residence in London, which was placed at the disposal of the Secretariat by Queen Elizabeth II, who was the head of the Commonwealth. However, as the building cannot house all of the Secretariat's staff in London, additional space is rented elsewhere in London. From this operational base, a large part of the secretary-general's work involves travelling around the Commonwealth keeping in personal contact with those at the heart of the governments of member states.

The secretary-general receives a salary of nearly £160,000 (2015) and a four‑storey mansion, Garden House, in Mayfair as an official residence.

Staff and responsibility

The secretary-general leads the Commonwealth Secretariat, and all Secretariat staff are responsible and answerable to them. They are supported by three deputy secretaries-general, which are elected by the Commonwealth heads of government via the members' high commissioners in London. Currently, the three deputy secretaries-general are Deodat Maharaj, Gary Dunn and Josephine Ojiambo. Until 2014, only two deputy secretaries-general were appointed along with an assistant secretary-general for corporate affairs. The secretary-general may appoint junior staff at their own discretion, provided the Secretariat can afford it, whilst more senior staff may be appointed only from a shortlist of nominations from the heads of government. In practice, the Secretary-General has more power than this; member governments consult the secretary-general on nominations, and the secretary-general has also at times submitted nominations of his own.

Formally, the secretary-general is given the same rank as a high commissioner or ambassador. However, in practice, their rank is considerably higher. At CHOGMs, they are the equal of the heads of government, except with preference deferred to the longest-serving head of government. At other ministerial meetings, they are considered primus inter pares. For the first three years of the job's existence the Foreign Office refused to invite the secretary-general to the Queen's annual diplomatic reception at Buckingham Palace, much to Arnold Smith's irritation, until in 1968 this refusal was over-ridden by Queen Elizabeth II herself.

The secretary-general was originally required to submit annual reports to the heads of government, but this has since been changed to reporting at biennial Commonwealth Heads of Government Meetings (CHOGM). The secretary-general is held responsible by the Commonwealth's Board of Governors in London.

Between 2016 and 2019, the staff of the Commonwealth secretariat declined in number, from 295 to 223.

Election

Since the 1993 CHOGM, it has been decided that the secretary-general is elected to a maximum of two four-year terms. The election is held by the assembled heads of government and other ministerial representatives at every other CHOGM. Nominations are received from the member states' governments, who sponsor the nomination through the election process and are responsible for withdrawing their candidate as they see fit.

The election is held in a Restricted Session of the CHOGM, in which only heads of government or ministerial representatives thereof may be present. The chair of the CHOGM (the head of government of the host nation) is responsible for ascertaining which candidate has the greatest support, through the conduct of negotiations and secret straw polls.

Secretaries-general seeking a second term in office are often elected unopposed. it was broken by a Zimbabwe-backed bid for Sri Lankan Lakshman Kadirgamar to displace New Zealand's Don McKinnon in 2003. At the vote, however, Kadirgamar was easily defeated by McKinnon, with only 11 members voting for him against 40 for McKinnon. In March 2019, the 53 high commissioners, meeting in London, confirmed the unwritten rule allowing secretaries-general to be challenged for a second term.

At the 2011 CHOGM, India's Kamalesh Sharma was re-elected to his second term unopposed. Sharma had won the position at the 2007 CHOGM, when he defeated Malta's Michael Frendo to replace McKinnon, who had served the maximum two terms.

At the 2015 CHOGM, Patricia Scotland, a former British cabinet minister, was nominated for Commonwealth secretary-general by her native country of Dominica and defeated Antiguan diplomat Sir Ronald Sanders and former deputy secretary-general for political affairs Mmasekgoa Masire-Mwamba of Botswana to become the 6th Commonwealth secretary-general and the first woman to hold the post. She took office on 1 April 2016. Lady Scotland's re-election to a second term was challenged at the 2022 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting but she won a second term, reportedly defeating Jamaican foreign minister Kamina Johnson Smith by a margin of 27 votes to 24. As the CHOGM had been delayed by two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Scotland agreed to only serve for two additional years.

At the 2024 CHOGM, Ghanaian foreign minister Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey was elected to succeed Baroness Scotland. She will begin her tenure as secretary-general on 1 April 2025.

List of secretaries-general

No.PortraitNameCountryTerm startTerm endBackgroundHead
(Tenure)1Arnold Smith[[File:Elizabeth II in Berlin 2015 (cropped).JPG100px]]
Elizabeth II
(1952–2022)2Sir Shridath Ramphal3Emeka Anyaoku4Don McKinnon5Kamalesh Sharma6Patricia Scotland
Baroness Scotland of Asthal[[File:King Charles III (July 2023).jpg100px]]
Charles III
(2022–present)7Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey
[[File:Arnold Cantwell Smith 1966 (cropped).jpg100px]]Canada1 July 196530 June 1975Canadian ambassador to Egypt (1958–1961)
Canadian ambassador to the USSR (1961–1963)
[[File:S. Ramphal 1975 (cropped).jpg100px]]Guyana1 July 197530 June 1990Foreign Minister of Guyana (1972–1975)
[[File:Chief Emeka Anyaoku 2006.jpg100px]]Nigeria1 July 199031 March 2000Deputy Secretary-General for Political Affairs (1977–1990)
[[File:Don McKinnon 2012.jpg100px]]New Zealand1 April 200031 March 2008Deputy Prime Minister of New Zealand (1990–1996)
Minister of Trade (1990–1996)
Minister of Foreign Affairs (1990–1999)
[[File:Kamalesh Sharma January 2015.jpg100px]]India1 April 200831 March 2016Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations (1997–2002)
Indian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom (2004–2008)
[[File:Patricia Scotland 2013 (cropped).jpg100px]]Dominica
United Kingdom1 April 201631 March 2025Attorney General for England and Wales and Northern Ireland (2007–2010)
UK Minister of State (Home Office; 2003–2007)
UK Parliamentary Secretary (Lord Chancellor's Department; 2001–2003)
UK Under-Secretary of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (1999–2001)
UK House of Lords (1997–present)
[[File:Shirley Ayorkor Botchway.jpg100px]]Ghana1 April 2025IncumbentMinister for Foreign Affairs for Ghana (2017–2025)

References

References

  1. "Role of the Secretary-General". [[Commonwealth Secretariat]].
  2. Doxey, Margaret. (January 1979). "The Commonwealth Secretary-General: Limits of Leadership". [[International Affairs (journal).
  3. (27 November 2015). "Baroness Patricia Scotland becomes first UK citizen to be elected secretary‑general of Commonwealth". The Independent.
  4. ''Final Approaches: A Memoir'' by Gerald Hensley, page 99 (2006, Auckland University Press, New Zealand) {{ISBN. 1-86940-378-9
  5. James Landale, [https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-48602852 Commonwealth Secretariat in 'urgent need' of reform], BBC News (12 June 2019).
  6. Baruah, Amit. (7 December 2003). "PM, Blair for representative government in Iraq soon". The Hindu.
  7. (January 2004). "Editorial: CHOGM 2003, Abuja, Nigeria". [[The Round Table Journal.
  8. (27 November 2015). "Commonwealth elects first woman secretary general". Times of Malta.
  9. (24 November 2015). "Lady Scotland vies to be next Commonwealth secretary general". The Guardian.
  10. (24 June 2022). "Australian-backed candidate fails to topple Commonwealth boss Patricia Scotland".
  11. (26 October 2024). "Commonwealth Announces Ghana Foreign Minister As New Secretary General". Barron's.
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