yes!!!!
In USA and Canada the first governs a territory, so representatives are appointed by Federal Government. The second has State or Provincial elected representatives.In USA and Canada the first governs a territory, so representatives are appointed by Federal Government. The second has State or Provincial elected representatives.
I think you may mean "statute". A statute is a law passed by a legislature which, itself, is comprised of elected representatives. A legislature can be either federal or state (federal or provincial in Canada).
The three levels of government are federal, provincial and municipal.
No, there is no provincial Senate in Canada. The Senate is solely a federal institution at the national level.
They are me and you
provincial and federal election cover different aspects provincial does the provincial laws and policies whereas federal does the nations(for example - Canada) laws and policies.
Queen Elizabeth II is Canada's sovereign. This role isn't specifically federal, and extends through all Canada's sovereign jurisdictions, federal and provincial.
The three levels of government in Canada are federal, provincial/territorial, and municipal. The federal government is responsible for national matters, the provincial/territorial governments handle regional issues, and municipal governments are in charge of local matters. Each level has its own elected representatives and specific areas of jurisdiction.
The people who are elected are called Members of Parliament, or MP's. The leader of the party with the most elected MP's becomes the Prime Minister.
Provincial Courts have jurisdiction only in their respective province, whereas Federal Courts have unlimited jurisdiction in Canada. Judges in Provincial Courts are appointed by premiers whereas Judges in Federal Courts are appointed by the governor general or prime minister.
federal government provincial government
Rosemary Brown (1930-2003) was a Jamaican-Canadian legislator in the provincial government of British Columbia. In 1972, she was the first black woman to be elected to a provincial legislature, and in 1975, the first black woman to run for the leadership of a federal party in Canada.