Germany is generally regarded as stable. Certainly, its system of government is very stable. German electoral law, with its heavy emphasis on proportional representation, favours relatively small parties. Since 1949 every central government except that of 1957-61) has been a coalition. On the whole, the fact that it is extremely hard for any one party to govern alone has had the effect of making parties listen to one another; it has also tended to enhance stability.
Germany is a federal, parliamentary, representative democratic republic. The Chancellor, currently Angela Merrel, is the head of government and exercises executive power, similar to the role of Prime Minister in other countries. The President, currently Horst Kohler, is the head of state, invested primarily with representative responsibilities and powers.
Germany is a part of the EU and has a representative democracy, where the people have a say in who rules over them. Currently, Germany has a very stable government.
it means to have balance when your an MP.
Well they like oil.
Political stability of a country is very important for a foreign business to enter into the country. They analysis of the business is mainly based on its political stability. The companies like IBM and Coke sent out of India in 1970¶s when there¶s a change in the ruling party
well first of all Germany started the holocaust, and then germanys all like hey Italy come help me with this so then italys all like ok i will! but then Italy doesnt like it anymore so he decides to leave and kill himself and then germanys all like o no im gonna kill myself too and then japans just like watever!
2 different political parties with opposite political views like the democrats and republicans of today
rebellions from the peasants in the Han dynasty and by people who didn't like the rule of Qin in the Qin dynasty.
Washington made it very clear that he didn't like political parties. He was afraid that the party would not work for the common good of the country, but for its own political purpose. If we analyze the political parties today I think he has a point.
There were 2 parts to Germany. They did not like each other so they put up a wall. The wall was knocked down in 1989.
the political ideas such as docoments os rep goverments like the magra cartha impacted america. it did this because it iffected the first ammendment we have in our constition today
back then, journalists were journalists and political affiliation wasn't apparent like it is today with Fox News and MSNBC...
Physical geography is essentially unchanged from medieval times to today. Political geography, of course, has changed beyond all recognition. Few political entities of medieval times have even survived to today, and those that have have mostly very different borders or internal boundaries.
Some did and some did not. Just like today when we vote for political leaders not everyone agrees. But in Richard the lionheart's case It is reasonable to say more than have the people like him.