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Government Presentation Social Studies 11. Three Branches of Government. Executive Branch : has the power to make decisions; create bills and bring them to Parliament to be passed into law Legislative Branch : makes, changes (amends), and repeals laws; pass bills into laws
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Three Branches of Government • Executive Branch: has the power to make decisions; create bills and bring them to Parliament to be passed into law • Legislative Branch: makes, changes (amends), and repeals laws; pass bills into laws • Judiciary Branch: interpret and uphold laws; includes all levels of the court system
Federal Government Executive Branch • Governor General • Prime Minister • Cabinet • Civil Service
Governor General • The Queen’s representative in Canada (5 yrs) • Is appointed by the Queen on advice of the PM • Gives formal (royal) assent to bills before they become law • Delivers Speech from the Throne to open Parliament • Dissolves Parliament before an election • Asks leader of the party with the most votes to form government and become Prime Minister • Performs ceremonial duties
Prime MinisterStephen Harper • Leader of the party with the most votes becomes Prime Minister • The Prime Minister is the head of the government, national leader, and party leader • Stephen Harper is the leader of the Progressive Conservative Party
Roles of Prime Minister • Head of Government: recommends new judges and senators to the GG, decides when to call an election, chooses and changes Cabinet members, has the final say in creating government policy • National Leader: addresses issues that concern all Canadians, represents Canada around the world, works with Premiers to coordinate and share responsibilities • Party Leader: spokesperson for party, gives patronage appointments, leads party in Parliament
Cabinet • Elected party members are chosen by the PM • Each Cabinet minister is responsible for a government department (Finance, Defence); this is called a portfolio • Each Cabinet member is responsible for the efficient & effective operation of the department • The PM selects a cabinet that equally represents men/women, regions of Canada, and ethnic/cultural groups • Currently 37 cabinet members • 11 are women
Cabinet • Main job is to draft legislation and bills that will be presented in the House of Commons • Cabinet meetings are private and held behind closed doors: at the meeting, cabinet can argue and question the PM and party policies/platform • In public, the cabinet must show party solidarity: they have to present a united front that they all agree with their leader and decisions of government, whether this is true or not!
Civil Service • A group of permanent employees who perform the daily business of government • They are the ones who have the most contact with the public = “face” of government • Senior civil servants advise ministers and help draft new laws, thus they influence public policy • Jobs include: statistics, write laws, collect taxes, inspect food/goods, process passports, deliver mail, process EI claims
Federal GovernmentLegislative Branch • Governor General • House of Commons • Senate
House of Commons • Politicians who hold a seat in the House of Commons are called Members of Parliament (MP) • MPs not in Cabinet are called backbenchers • Each MP represents the population in their electoral riding/district/constituency • Seats are assigned according to representation by population (approx. 1 per 100,000) • MPs can hold a seat for a maximum of 5 years, however elections are usually called 3-4 years into the term of office
House of Commons • There are currently 308 seats in the House • Conservatives hold 145 seats • Liberals hold 77 seats • Bloc Quebecois hold 48 seats • NDP hold 37 seats • 1 Independent If any seat is vacated between elections a by-election is held in that riding to fill the seat
House of Commons • A majority government is formed when one political party wins over 50% of the seats (=155 or more seats) • A minority government is formed when no one party wins more than 50% of the seats; parties must form alliances to gain majority and form government • The current government in Ottawa is a minority government
House of Commons • The government can hold office as long as they have the support of the majority = responsible government • Each party holds caucus meetings = private meetings to discuss party policy; MPs can express opinions freely • When it is time to vote in the House, all MPs must follow the party line • Party Whip: ensures all party members are in the house when it is time to vote • Sometimes MPs can vote according to what they believe: this is called a free vote
House of Commons • If government does not have support in the House, they can be forced out of office – this is called a vote of non confidence • A vote of non confidence occurs when a bill is defeated in the House • This occurs more often when it is a minority government • If this happens, the GG must dissolve Parliament and call an election
James MooreMember of Parliament • Conservative MP for Port Moody – Westwood – Port Coquitlam • Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Public Works and Government Services and for the Pacific Gateway and the Vancouver-Whistler Olympics
The Opposition • The Opposition examines and criticizes government policy • Ensures the government is responsible • Voice their opinion during Question Period (45 minutes) • Filibuster = debate overnight to show dislike for a bill
Michael IgnatieffOfficial Leader of the Opposition • Political party with the 2nd largest number of votes forms the Official Opposition • The leader of this party is the Official Leader of the Opposition • Shadow Cabinet follows each Cabinet Minister • Michael Ignatieff is the leader of the Liberal Party
Giles DuceppeLeader of Bloc Quebecois • His party is part of the Opposition
Jack LaytonLeader of the NDP • His party is part of the Opposition
Senate • Is the “Red Room” or “Upper House of Parliament” • The goal of the Senate is to protect and represent regional and minority rights • Senators are appointed by the GG based on recommendations from the PM • Senators can remain in office until the age of 75
Senate • There are currently 105 seats in the Senate • Conservatives hold 53 seats • Liberals hold 49 seats • 3 people are sitting as Independent
Distribution of Seats in the Senate BC 6 Nova Scotia 10 Alberta 6 New Brunswick 10 Saskatchewan 6 PEI 4 Manitoba 6 Newfoundland 6 Ontario 24 Yukon 1 Quebec 24 NWT 1 Nunavut 1
Senate • The Senate provides a “sober second thought” to bill legislation from the House • The Senate reviews, amends, delays, defeats bills from the House of Commons • The Senate can also create bills (i.e. restarting the nuclear reactor in Ontario) • The Senate conducts committee work to examine bills and important issues (i.e. euthanasia, poverty, science research)
Senate • Canadians feel the Senate is ineffective because the seats are filled by patronage (reward) appointments from each party • A proposal for reform, called the Triple E Senate, would create an equal, elected, and effective governing body • Equal representation • Elected Senators • Effectively defeat bills from the House
Executive Branch Lieutenant Governor Premier Cabinet Civil Service Legislative Branch Lieutenant Governor Legislative Assembly BC Legislative Assembly
Lieutenant GovernorSteven Point • The Lieutenant Governor represents the Queen in BC • The LG has a similar role to the federal GG: gives formal assent to bills and performs ceremonial duties • Mr. Point is BC’s first Aboriginal LG
Gordon CampbellPremier • Leader of the party with the most votes becomes Premier • The Premier has a similar role to the PM: head of government, leader of BC, leader of the BC Liberal party • Mr. Campbell is in his third term as Premier
Cabinet • The Cabinet in the BC Legislative Assembly has a similar role to the federal Cabinet: they create and draft legislation • This legislation is brought forward as a bill in the Legislative Assembly in hopes of being passed into law • Mr. Campbell has selected 25 MLAs for his cabinet (18 men, 7 women)
Legislative Assembly • Politicians elected to Victoria are called Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) • There are currently 85 seats in the Legislative Assembly: 49 Liberal, 35 New Democratic Party (NDP), 1 Independent • MLAs can hold their seat for 5 years
Speaker of the HouseBill Barisoff • Is elected by fellow MLAs • Oversees proceedings in the House, including the introduction of bills and Question Period • All comments and questions are directed through him using the phrase “Mr. Speaker…” • He is a Liberal MLA
Sergeant At Arms • Military officer who provides security in the Legislative Assembly • Ensures the safety of MLAs, the public, the buildings • Can be asked to remove a MLA who isn’t following the rules of the House
Legislative Assembly • Similar to the House of Commons, a Mace must be present in the Legislative Assembly in order for the House to sit • The Sergeant At Arms is the only person who touches and carries the Mace
Carole JamesLeader of the Opposition Party • Examines and criticizes the Premier and decisions of the government • Appoints a shadow cabinet to monitor the actions of Cabinet • She is a NDP MLA
Mike FarnworthMember of the Legislative Assembly • Elected MP for the Port Coquitlam-Burke Mountain riding • He is Opposition House Leader and serves as Opposition Critic for Public Safety and Solicitor General. • He is a NDP MLA
Greg MooreMayor of Port Coquitlam • Leader of the Municipal Government • Elected member of Town Council • Accountable to local citizens
Government Presentationfor Social Studies 11 Created by Miss Ross and Miss Miller Updated January 2010