Yes, the prime minister and the president can belong to the same party, depending on the political system of a country. In parliamentary systems, it is common for both positions to be held by members of the same party, especially when that party has a majority in the legislature. However, in presidential systems, the president and the prime minister (if there is one) may belong to different parties, as their roles and powers are distinct. Ultimately, it varies by the specific political structure and electoral rules of each country.
He belong to the Conservative Party
The Labour Party (UK)
Yes, Laos is a socialist republic with a single party, with a Prime Minister and a President.
Prime minister stephen harper belongs to the conservative party.
Usually, they do and they are the leader of the largest party in the country's parliament.
1) LINK :The prime minister is the between the. cabinet and the president. 2) FORMATION OF THE CABINET :The prime minister prepares the list of his council of ministers and sends it to the president. 3) LEADER OF THE PARTY :The prime minister has the main say in framing the policy of the party.
The United Kingdom does not have a President. The Prime Minister is a party leader in the British Parliament, and has the executive powers of a President - but not the status, as this is held by the Queen.
If the Prime Minister dies, the governing party selects a replacement. In some countries this person must then be approved by a monarch or president.
Actually, Denmark doesn't have a president, it has a prime minister. The prime minister that is currently in power there is Lars Løkke Rasmussen and he is the head of a coalition of the Liberal Party and the Conservative People Party.
The current prime minister is Mark Rutte of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD). The previous prime minister was Jan Peter Balkenende.
A president named Cavaco Silva and the prime minister Jose SocratesJose Sócrates, from the Portuguese Socialist Party, its the Portuguese Prime-Minister.The President is Cavaco Silva, from the Portuguese Social-Democracy Party
Currently (2013) the President of Portugal is Anibal Antonio Cavaco Silva; and the Prime Minister is Pedro Passos Coelho. President Cavaco Silva was first elected as president in 2006, and then re-elected in 2011. Cavaco Silva was also elected as Prime Minister in 1985 and served as such until 1995. Prime Minister Passos Coelho was elected as Prime Minister in 2011. He is the leader of the Social Democratic Party (PSD).