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the of the commissioner who represnts the federal government in quebec
Ontario is a province and not a territory and does not have a commissioner who represents the federal government!
David Johnson
flaherty, james michael
it doesn.t have commationer.
The local government of Alberta Canada is municipal governments. It is responsible for fire services, utilities, and public transportation. There are three governments in Canada, federal, provincial, and municipal.
Ontario does not have a commissioner. Commissioners are the chief executives of territories, appointed as representatives of the federal government. The chief executive officer of Ontario is the Lieutenant Governor, currently David Onley. The Lieutenant Governor is the representative of the Queen in Ontario, appointed by the Governor General.
Their is no such thing as a federal state Federal = Nation *President* State = State (its ran by a different branch of the Government) * Governor* County = County (Ran by a County Government) *Treasurer/Sheriff/Commissioner* Municipal = City/Town (Ran by a lower government) *Mayor* But the UK does not have states it has the Nations. Below nations are counties Below Counties are cities
While federal parties do not hold power at the provincial level, the federal party with the most elected members in Alberta is the Conservative Party.
The government in Canada is a constitutional monarchy that is also a parliamentary democracy and a federation. Nunavut is a federal territory, which means that, unlike provinces, it is an administrative division of the federal government. Despite this, it has a fairly significant degree of self government. In Nunavut, there is a chief executive appointed by the federal government called the Commissioner, whose role is largely symbolic. The head of the government is the Premier, who is chosen by and from the elected Legislative Assembly of Nunavut. The assembly is composed of 19 members serving 4-year terms of office, and representing a total of about 33,000 constituents, many belonging to the scattered Inuit tribes. There are no political parties.
Canada has 10 Lieutenant Governors, one for each province. Canada also has 3 Commissioners, one for each territory. The role of a Commissioner is similar to that of a Lieutenant Governor, except that, officially, a Commissioner is a representative of the federal Government and not of the Crown.
Alberta just has the federal tax of 5%. There's no other taxes like other provinces have....yet.