NO
G4 countries are a group of 4 countries comprising of India, Brazil, Japan and Germany who support each other's bid for UN security council seat. Currently there are only 4 permanent members of UN security council and G4 countries are bidding to expand it. Currently, there are 5 permanents members of UN security council( UK, USA, China, France and Russia), who is holding veto power.
The UN security council has 15 members. Of these, 5 nations are permanent members (China, France, Russia, United Kingdom, & United States) who hold veto power. The remaining 10 are elected non-permanent members with two-year terms. The non-permanent members are elected from the General Assembly and do not have veto power over the Council's resolutions.
This question is not clear. Depending on how you view it, every member is permanent, since they do not have to renew their membership, or none are, since they can withdraw whenever they want. I wonder whether you meant "why are some members of the UN Security Council permanent". The answer to that is historical - the 5 permanent members (China, France, Russia, the UK and the US) were on the winning side of the 2nd world war, and decided that they would hold permanent seats on the council. The remaining UN countries elect the other 10 members of the council for 2 years each.
This refers to the UN Security Council. The partner that initiated the construction of the UN (no man had gone there before because it wasn't built!) was Rockerfeller. Black Belt
There are five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council. They are as follows:-Republic of ChinaFranceRussiaUnited KingdomUnited States
If Germany joined, three of the seven permanent members would be European, giving that region unfair weight. The three European seats could be combined into one (a rotating seat or one representing the European Union), but this would water down the power of Britain and France, which can veto any such change in the Charter. Japan's bid for a seat faces Chinese opposition. Also, if Japan or Germany got a seat, then what about India, with 20 percent of the world's population? And what about an Islamic country such as Indonesia? Finally, what about Latin America and Africa? Possible new permanent member could include Germany, Japan, India, Brazil, Egypt, and either Nigeria or South Africa. None of these plans has made such progress. Any overhaul of the Security Council would require a change in the UN Charter, and a change in membership would reduce the power of the current five permanent members, any of which could veto the change, making any change very difficult. Sources: International Relations, Eighth Edition by Joshua S. Goldstein and Jon C. Pevehouse.
The legislative body of Switzerland has a parliament called the Federal Assembly. It is divided into the Council of States which has 46 seats and the National Council which has 200 seats.
This is the local authority of the borough of Slough, which is located in southeast England. The council was established in 1863. There are 41 seats on the council.
It has a traditional mayor/city council form of government, but with both district and at-large seats on the council.
Russian parliament consists of two chambers (same as the US, and for the same reasons): The State Duma has 450 seats and the Federation Council has 176 seats.
The Soviet Union, Great Britain, China and France were the most significant of the Allies (excluding US), which is why these five countries now hold permanent seats on the UN Security Council.
There are no official seats but the district council meets in Matthew Town on Great Inagua.