No. Prime Ministers are in government (the head of the executive branch) and leaders of their political party in the legislature, while Opposition leaders are simply the leaders of their political party in the legislature,
Pitt
they wear the exact same as the catholic church
Their last names are Pitt
William Pitt
They are both democratically elected leaders.
The role of the Prime Minister in Australia is to represent Australia overseas and communicate with the countries leaders. He/She is the head of cabinet, a government committee in which the main decisions for the executive government are made,chairing the weekly party meeting in which the party decides policy and examines new legislation, deciding when to call an election and leading the party in it, being chief spokesperson in the House of Representatives and choosing senators and members of the same party to be ministers.
No.Cabinet ministers are the council of ministers which assist the prime minister in the administration including ministers from all posts and offices while defence minister is the individual minister in the cabinet which looks after the field of defence of the country.
By popular vote in compulsory elections, in the same way as a prime minister.
Communists Leaders only allow visitors with the same communist lines,but not alls,only the Leaders ,Ambassadors, Ministers with previous acceptance by the Korean Communist Party.
Puerto Rico doesn't have any Prime Ministers. It is led by a governor, Luis G. Fortuño, pretty much the same way that a US state is leaded.
No. A Cabinet Minister is one of the (currently 39) Ministers of the Crown who are members of the Cabinet, a committee responsible for government policy chaired by the Prime Minister. Sometimes (though not currently) a Prime Minister will designate a Deputy Prime Minister, though the position is largely honorary and doesn't imply succession. There are also Deputy Ministers, but these are members of the civil service, not politicians.
No - Cabinet Ministers are Members of Parliament that hold significant office within government. Examples of Cabinet Ministers in Britain are the Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer. MPs (Members of Parliament) are elected, and can become members of the cabinet. However they are not necessarily cabinet ministers. MPs that hold no cabinet position are often referred to as "back-benchers", which refers to their position in the House of Commons (hence not on the Front Bench, of either the ruling party of the opposition).