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         Canada Constitutional Monarchy:     more detail
  1. A Crown of Maples: Constitutional Monarchy in Canada
  2. Higher Education in Canada: Government of Canada, Parliamentary system, Constitutional monarchy, Multilingualism, Multiculturalism, Industrialisation, Higher education in Newfoundland and Labrador
  3. Majesty in Canada: Essays on the Role of Royalty

81. History Of Canada
canada HISTORY (GOVERNMENT) canada is a constitutional monarchy with a federalsystem, a parliamentary government, and strong democratic traditions.
http://www.worldrover.com/history/canada_history.html
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    Canada
    HISTORY
    (GOVERNMENT) Canada is a constitutional monarchy with a federal system, a parliamentary government, and strong democratic traditions. Many of the country's legal practices are based on unwritten custom, but the federal structure resembles the U.S. system. The 1982 Charter of Rights guarantees basic rights in many areas. Queen Elizabeth II, as Queen of Canada, serves as a symbol of the nation's unity. She appoints a governor general on the advice of the prime minister of Canada, usually for a 5-year term. The prime minister is the leader of the political party in power and is the head of the cabinet. The cabinet remains in office as long as it retains majority support in the House of Commons on major issues. Canada's parliament consists of an elected House of Commons and an appointed Senate. Legislative power rests with the 301-member Commons, which is elected for a period not to exceed 5 years. The prime minister may ask the governor general to dissolve parliament and call new elections at any time during that period. Federal elections were last held in June 1997. Vacancies in the 104-member Senate, whose members serve until the age of 75, are filled by the governor general on the advice of the prime minister. Recent constitutional initiatives have sought unsuccessfully to strengthen the Senate by making it elective and assigning it a greater regional representational role.
  • 82. Untitled Document
    price only economic, constitutional monarchy provides continuity, especially at timeof political transition. As well, the monarchy gives canada a distinctive
    http://members.aol.com/totarisse/politiques2-en.html
    Policies Lets Keep Our Constitution And Our Crown The Constitution of Canada declares that the Government of Canada and the Commander in Chief of the Forces are vested in the Queen. Her Majesty is one of three parts of the Parliament of Canada (Queen, Senate and Commons). She is Sovereign of the Order of Canada, Sovereign of the Order of Military Merit, Colonel-in-Chief of numerous units of the Canadian Forces, Honorary Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and Patron of many institutions and organisations in various walks of Canadian life. Canada Has Always Been A Monarchy From the days of earliest settlement the only form of society Canadians have known has been a monarchy. The native people themselves had a tribal idea of kingship. Our tradition of monarchy was French and British and became, as it now is, distinctly Canadian. In 1867 Canadians freely and deliberately reaffirmed their allegiance to the Monarchy. They have done so at each subsequent stage in their political development. Monarchy More Democratic Than Republic?

    83. Links.htm
    of canada, Canadian Government Web site for HM Queen Elizabeth II of canada. askedone of its former literary critics, herself a constitutional monarchist, to
    http://www.sovereignpeople.com/links.html
    Other related links:
    These links are included because of thematic relevance to the republican debate globally. The inclusion of sites does not necessarily imply endorsement of the views contained therein, which are the sole responsibility of the organisations running those sites. Governor-General of Australia ( Commonwealth Parliament site)
    Web site of the Governor-General of Canada
    Canadian Government Web site for HM Queen Elizabeth II of Canada
    Buckingham Palace
    's Web site
    Web site of the Governor-General of New Zealand
    Web pages for State Governors: Victoria Tasmania and New South Wales
    Web sites for Provincial Lieutenant-Governors (left-right, from top): New Brunswick Ontario Quebec Saskatchewan and Prince Edward Island
    Web page of the Governor-General of Barbados
    Australians for

    Constitutional Monarchy
    The Australian ... Monarchist League No Republic Tasmania No Republic Victoria Monarchist League of Canada Canadian Monarchist On-Line The Constitutional Monarchy Association The International Monarchist League (includes non-Commonwealth links) TheMonarchist.com

    84. Constitutional Monarchy - Wikipedia
    Other languages Dansk. constitutional monarchy. From Wikipedia, thefree encyclopedia. constitutional monarchy Benefits Pitfalls.
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitutional_monarchy
    Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
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    Other languages: Dansk
    Constitutional Monarchy
    (Redirected from Constitutional monarchy A constitutional monarchy (also capitalised as Constitutional Monarchy) is a system of government established under a constitution and which acknowledges a monarch or other hereditary title for either diplomatic protocol (see Head of state ) or as part of the government . While its origins were quasi-democratic by the nineteenth century, modern constitutional monarchy operates on the principle that the monarch reigns but does not rule, with the rulers being democratically accountable and controllable. The United Kingdom is an example where there is no written constitution and its House of Lords entitled holders of hereditary title to some activities of the government. Instead of a written constitution it operates under a collection of fundamental laws, prerogatives and conventions that together form Britain's

    85. Royal Assent - Wikipedia
    Other languages Dansk. constitutional monarchy. (Redirected from RoyalAssent). A constitutional monarchy Benefits Pitfalls. While
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Assent
    Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
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    Royal Assent
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Royal Assent is the formal method by which a Monarch in many constitutional monarchies completes the process of the enactment of legislation, by formally assenting to an Act of Parliament . In most republics, this process is referred to as signing a Bill into law . Royal Assent is one of the reserve powers of the Monarch. Within countries that operate the Westminster system of parliamentary government and which continue to have the British monarch as their own sovereign, the Royal Assent in given to legislation by the Governor-General
    The Three Options
    Three formal options exist when a Bill is presented for the Royal Assent.

    86. A List Of Commonwealth Countries A-J
    Cameroon, 1995, emergent democratic republic. canada, 1931, sovereignconstitutional monarchy. Cayman Islands, 1931, British dependent territory.
    http://www.know-britain.com/general/commonwealth_countries1.html

    in England
    COMMONWEALTH COUNTRIES FROM A-J country date joined constitutional status Anguilla British dependent territory Antigua and Barbuda sovereign constitutional monarchy Australia sovereign constitutional monarchy Australian Antarctic Territory Australian external territory Bahamas sovereign constitutional monarchy Bangladesh sovereign republic Barbados sovereign constitutional monarchy Belize sovereign constitutional monarchy Bermuda British dependent territory Botswana sovereign republic British Antarctic Territory British dependent territory British Indian Ocean Territory British dependent territory British Virgin Islands British dependent territory Brunei sovereign monarchy Cameroon emergent democratic republic Canada sovereign constitutional monarchy Cayman Islands British dependent territory Channel Islands (Guernsey, Jersey) UK crown dependencies Cook Islands New Zealand associated territory Cyprus sovereign republic Dominica sovereign republic Falkland Islands British dependent territory Falkland Islands Dependencies British dependent territories Fiji sovereign republic Gambia sovereign republic Ghana sovereign republic Gibraltar British dependent territory Grenada sovereign constitutional monarchy Guyana sovereign republic India sovereign republic Isle of Man UK crown dependency Jamaica sovereign constitutional monarchy

    List of Commonwealth Countries K-Z

    Hotels and Guest Houses in England
    Know Britain Home Page
    General Index
    latest update: 13/11/02

    87. Thestar.com May. 31, 2002 We Want To Keep Monarchy Graham Fraser
    polled agreed with both positions. But Canadians don't know much aboutCanada's constitutional monarchy. Of those asked Who is
    http://www.ekos.com/media/files/torstar-31-05-2002b.html
    May. 31, 2002 We want to keep monarchy Graham Fraser
    NATIONAL AFFAIRS WRITER RELATED LINKS Speak Out: Canada and the monarchy Schedule of TV coverage Our Jubilee special section Official Jubilee site ... Monarchist League of Canada OTTAWA — The monarchy may be tired, regressive, outdated and irrelevant for many Canadians — but it's ours. Canadians don't know much about it — only 5 per cent of those polled know that Queen Elizabeth II is Canada's head of state — but the desire to abolish the monarchy has dropped dramatically since 1994, and only a minority of Canadians want to give it up. EKOS Research Associates found that this contradiction is at the heart of Canadians' perceptions of the monarchy. A clear majority — 55 per cent — agreed with the statement: "The monarchy is one of those important things that provides Canadians with an unique identity separate from the U.S." Only 31 per cent disagreed. But an almost equal proportion — 52 per cent — agreed with the statement: "The monarchy is an outdated and regressive institution that has no real relevance to most Canadians today;" 33 per cent disagreed.

    88. CNEWS: Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee - Canucks Down On Royals
    the monarchy. In the poll, 62% of Canadians said they believe the constitutionalmonarchy helps to define canada's identity. And 79
    http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSJubilee/0204_poll-sun.html
    Inside CANOE.CA SLAM! Sports Jam! Showbiz AllPop CNEWS Webfin Money C-Health Lifewise AUTONET.CA Newsstand Travel Search eBay.ca Get away today 411 online Free E-Mail Shop.canoe.ca CareerConnection Classified Extra Match Contact Obituaries Today Restaurants Hotels Weather Horoscopes Lotteries Crossword Scoreboard News Ticker Biz Ticker Sports Ticker TV Listings Movie Listings CLIVE Concerts Mutual Funds Stocks Feedback Index World
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    ... Charities Monday, February 4, 2002 Canucks down on royals By JENNIFER BILL Toronto Sun As Queen Elizabeth marks 50 years this week as Canada's head of state, a new Ipsos-Reid poll found 48% of Canadians are in favour of rejecting the monarchy. Pollsters questioned 1,001 people between Jan. 29 and 31 and found that almost half of Canadians (48%) would prefer a U.S.-style republic system of government. And 65%, or two-thirds of Canadians, said they are indifferent to the royal family's importance, adding they should not have a formal role and should be regarded as "simply celebrities." But the poll also showed contradictions in Canada's view of the monarchy. In the poll, 62% of Canadians said they believe the constitutional monarchy helps to define Canada's identity. And 79% of respondents said they still support a constitutional monarchy.

    89. The Monarchist League Of Canada
    The Monarchist League Of canada, Comments, Questions or Suggestions for the website?The Monarchist League Of canada © 2001 AP- All rights reserved.
    http://www.monarchist.ca/menu/archives.html
    The Monarchist League Of Canada
    Home

    Arguments For The Crown

    What Is The League?

    Canadian Monarchist News
    ...
    RED BOXES

    Links To Related Sites
    Quotable Quotes
    What YOU Can Do

    League Documents The Archives
    The League publishes several basic recruiting/information pamphlets, the texts of which we supply herewith. As well, over the course of its history, the League has made a number of official statements. For instance, it has testified before Federal and Provincial Parliamentary Committees, such as those studying the future of Federalism, or amendments to the Citizenship Act. It has also issued Position Papers and Information Sheets on matters of controversy and interest, ranging from The Royal Anthem to to the Victoria Cross. The materials contained in this menu item reflect an infinitesimal proportion of the archives and will be continually updated as scanning time permits. At this time, our internet Archives can offer:

    90. Parks Canada - The Queen's Golden Jubilee
    Today, canada enjoys the status of kingdom, and remains the largest constitutionalmonarchy in the world. Monarchs since Confederation (1867).
    http://www2.parkscanada.gc.ca/jubilee/monarch_history_e.htm

    91. David Flint Argues That Australians Prefer Their Existing Constitutional Monarch
    They somewhat or strongly agreed with the statement I support the constitutionalmonarchy as canada's current form of government where we elect
    http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/2002/Dec02/Flint1.htm
    ON LINE opinion Home Search this site Forum Feedback ... Contributors' guide Search this site: Cornerstone Members On Line Opinion
    is a not-for-profit publication and relies on the generosity of its sponsors, editors and contributors. If you would like to help, contact us Collaborative Editors On Line Opinion operates because of the time and efforts put in by our panel of collaborative editors. We need to thank
    the following organisations for
    their generosity: The Centre for Independent Studies Oxfam Community Aid Abroad Ozprospect QUT Creative Industries Faculty ... Australian Republican Movement
    Canadians support their Constitutional Monarchy - and so do Australians!
    By David Flint
    Posted 24/12/02 Sign up here for free email updates! It is strange indeed that the Australian media has not reported the strong support for the constitutional monarchy in two polls commissioned this year by leading Canadian media organisations. After all, republicanism seems to be considered particularly newsworthy here. When a Canadian minister, during The Queen's Golden Jubilee visit, mused about Canada becoming a republic, that actually made headlines in Australia! One poll commissioned by the Globe and Mail and CTV recorded a 79 per cent support for the Canadian constitutional monarchy! They "somewhat" or "strongly" agreed with the statement "I support the constitutional monarchy as Canada's current form of government where we elect governments whose leader becomes Prime Minister". This is a far more accurate question than that asked in any Australian opinion poll on this issue. What is particularly interesting is the result in French Canada.

    92. Crown In Canada
    concept representing the supreme executive power of the State in a constitutionalmonarchy. power but does not exercise it (MacKinnon, The Crown in canada).
    http://www.iaa.gov.sk.ca/provsec/events/jubilee/crown/2head.htm
    The Monarch as Head of State a. The Theory of the Crown "The Crown" is a subtle concept representing the supreme executive power of the State in a constitutional monarchy. This power is placed above and outside the governmental structure and political parties of the day; power is given to them temporarily and in trust by the Crown on behalf of the people. Thus one institution (the government) does not possess power but exercises it; while the other institution (the Crown) possesses power but does not exercise it (MacKinnon, The Crown in Canada). "The government rules. It does not reign. The Crown reigns... the power of the state is held in a non-partisan office above the conflicts and divisions of the political process" (Monet, The Canadian Crown). The Crown joins together the component parts of the State: the legislative (Parliament or Legislature), the executive (Cabinet, government, public service), and judicial (the Courts). The Crown’s representative is commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces. The Crown links the provinces and the central government in the federal State. (In addition, the Queen, as Head of the Commonwealth, personally links Canada to its Commonwealth partners.) b. The Monarch Personifying the Nation

    93. FÉDÉRATION CANADIENNE
    But fond reminiscence is not enough. For as long as canada is a constitutionalmonarchy, the federal government has a duty to make that system work.
    http://www.vigile.net/ds-federation/docs/02-2-6-np.html
    «« monarchie canadian
    The Crown of Canada
    National Post February 6, 2002
    Éditorial - A year before her accession, the Queen told Canadians that "they have placed in our hearts a love for their country and its people which will never grow cold." She has proven this with half-a-century of service, and her Golden Jubilee is an occasion for thanks. Many celebrations have been organized around the country.
    Republicanism is a respectable and efficient form of democratic government, as is constitutional monarchy. Canada, however, has chosen the latter rather than the former, and unless and until that changes, the government has a duty to throw its weight behind the institution. As members of the Royal family acknowledge, a country's citizens are and should be free to decide on their own form of government. At some point in the future, Canadians may or may not desire change, but recent polls have shown that a large majority support the monarchy. A National Post/COMPAS poll this week showed that 63% want to keep it, while only 30% favour a republic. A Gallup poll in 1999 found support for the monarchy was increasing among the young. This popular support, together with the institutional entrenchment of the Canadian Crown, makes it clear that the monarchy is not going simply to fade away.
    From time to time, a republican has surfaced to propose abolition. John Manley, the Deputy Prime Minister and an unofficial candidate to succeed Jean Chrétien, has mused openly about severing links to the Crown. Last May, Mr. Manley told a CBC reporter that Canada's head of state should "reflect Canadian diversity" and be "chosen by Canadians." In December, 1998, an unidentified senior advisor in the Prime Minister's Office also floated the idea of abolishing the monarchy, suggesting it would make a "grand project to kick off the new millennium." But the government quickly backed off amid strong opposition from many quarters, including provincial premiers.

    94. World InfoZone - Canada Information - Page 2
    canada became an independent country in 1931 but remained a constitutionalmonarchy with the British monarch as the head of state.
    http://www.worldinfozone.com/country.php?country=Canada&page=2

    95. Journals-Issue 48 (October 31, 1996)
    The Honourable Senator Cools called the attention of the Senate to canada's constitutionalmonarchy; and to the history of the Sovereign's Representative in
    http://www.parl.gc.ca/english/senate/jour-e/48jr-e.htm
    45 Elizabeth II, A.D. 1996, Canada
    Journals of the Senate
    Issue 48
    Thursday, October 31, 1996
    2:00 p.m.
    The Honourable Gildas L. Molgat, Speaker
    The Members convened were: The Honourable Senators PRAYERS
    SENATORS' STATEMENTS
    Some Honourable Senators made statements.
    DAILY ROUTINE OF BUSINESS
    Tabling of Documents
    The Honourable the Speaker informed the Senate that the Clerk of the Senate had tabled the following:
    Government Notices of Motions
    With leave of the Senate, The Honourable Senator Graham moved, seconded by the Honourable Senator Bosa: That the Clerk's Accounts be referred to the Standing Committee on Internal Economy, Budgets and Administration. The question being put on the motion, it was adopted.
    Presentation of Reports from Standing or Special Committees
    The Honourable Senator Kirby, Chairman of the Standing Senate Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce, tabled its Ninth Report entitled: 1997 Financial Institution Reform: Lowering the Barriers to Foreign Banks.Sessional Paper No. 2/35-478S. The Honourable Senator Kirby moved, seconded by the Honourable Senator Maheu, that the Report be placed on the Orders of the Day for consideration at the next sitting.

    96. CNEWS: Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee - Liz Can't Get No Respect
    But we feel we should add just one proviso to our support for canada's constitutionalmonarchy if there's a Queen Camilla in our future, we're voting for a
    http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWSJubilee/1006_mandel-sun.html
    Inside CANOE.CA SLAM! Sports Jam! Showbiz AllPop CNEWS Webfin Money C-Health Lifewise AUTONET.CA Newsstand Travel Search eBay.ca Get away today 411 online Free E-Mail Shop.canoe.ca CareerConnection Classified Extra Match Contact Obituaries Today Restaurants Hotels Weather Horoscopes Lotteries Crossword Scoreboard News Ticker Biz Ticker Sports Ticker TV Listings Movie Listings CLIVE Concerts Mutual Funds Stocks Feedback Index World
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    ... Charities Sunday, October 6, 2002 Liz can't get no respect She may be our Queen but we don't treat her royally By MICHELE MANDEL Toronto Sun What does it take to get a gal on the front page? Around here, a nice pair of knockers always does the trick, but Her Royal Highness is above flashing her bosom to her subjects, and who can blame the poor dear? Now if her name was Ron MacLean, Queen Elizabeth could have guaranteed herself a week's worth of top billing. Lord knows, she's trying to get into this hockey thing Canadians call religion. For the first time in the history of the monarchy, the Queen is actually set to drop a pre-season hockey puck tonight at centre ice in Vancouver's GM Place from gloved hands, no doubt. And she's being escorted by that true blue blood Canadian royal, Wayne Gretzky. But she still won't manage to rival the insane news lock MacLean had on Canadians' attention this past week. She may be Canada's Queen, but she really doesn't get much respect.

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