Cabinet of Heiban

The People's Cabinet of Heiban (Guoyu: 海傍人民内阁; Ramayan: ᨀᨅᨗᨊᨙᨈ ᨑᨀᨐᨈ ᨖᨙᨅᨘᨕᨊ), commonly referred to as the Cabinet of Heiban, is a body of government part of the consisting of the Vice Secretariat of Heiban, 21 secretariats, 6 functionaries, and a president of cabinet. The Cabinet meets at the Executive Building in the capital city of Qifeng, and is regarded as the principal advisory body to the. The secretariats are in no way involved with the Monarch of Heiban, and they shall only report to the in matters of national urgency.

The secretariats of Heiban are the heads of the departments known as Secretaries, tasked with the responsibility of overseeing and handling specific matters of state. All secretaries work in direct correlation to the head of government, and none but one, the Royal Treasury of Heiban, carry the designation 'royal' in their name, as the head of state cannot enforce any direct power over the secretaries or the secretariats. The secretariats are all drawn from Parliament directly by the Royal Council upon confirmation from the, to hold the position for a total of 5 years, during which they cannot be replaced or fired, unless they receive a Royal Ban from the monarch, with confirmation from the grand secretariat. The secretaries of Heiban function under a bureaucratic system, and are divided into sub-secretaries, directorates, departments, divisions and sections.

The six functionaries of Heiban are people that either hold a hereditary historic position in Heiban, or are directly appointed by Parliament, the monarch, the Royal Council or the grand secretariat. They handle very specific government and social affairs that lie beyond the authority of the secretaries. The functionaries are the Chief Commander of the Armed Forces, the Protector of the Faith, the Chief of the Heibanese Royal Guard, the Matriarch of Heiban, the Royal Press Secretary, and the Head of Catastrophe Prevention. Functionaries don't have a fixed term for their position, and carry life tenure that can only be taken away by request of the Monarch and through quorum at Parliament.