The Head of State in France is the President of France.
Nicolas Sarkozy is the French president since 2007 and until 2012.
Modern day France had a President, his name is Nicolas Sarkozy. His wife (his third one!) is Carla Bruni.
currently the French president is Nicolas Sarkozy.
No. France and Ireland are two different countries, so they each have their own governments. They are both republics and have a president, but in Ireland's case, the president is head of state, not head of government, whereas France has a different system.
The government. Crown in this case originally referred to the head of the government in England, but now, properly means "government owned".
France is a democracy. So they can change the government by having elections.
In France there are Régions and Départements.
Yes. France is a democracy.
President Nicolas Sarkozy.
Because the president is the head of country. The prime minister is the boss of other ministries (by the way, the head of the government).
President, currently its Nicolas Sarkozy.
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Right now, it is a democracy.
The leader of France is the president of France, currently François Hollande.(took office May 15, 2012)The president of France also nominally appoints the Prime Minister of France (currently Jean-Marc Ayrault) who is also seen as a leader of France, and is chosen from the elected members of the majority party or coalition.
No. France and Ireland are two different countries, so they each have their own governments. They are both republics and have a president, but in Ireland's case, the president is head of state, not head of government, whereas France has a different system.
The government of France is republican
No, France does not have a communist government.
The French prime minister (technically head of government) lives and works in the Hotel Matignon, a large mansion located Rue de Varennes in Paris, France. The French president (head of state) lives and works in the Elysée palace, rue de Saint Honoré, near the bottom of the Champs-Elysées avenue in Paris.
The government. Crown in this case originally referred to the head of the government in England, but now, properly means "government owned".
France had a government, with a king. Yeah.