No, the right to admit new states does not belong to the State Department. According to the U.S. Constitution, specifically Article IV, Section 3, the authority to admit new states is vested in Congress. The process typically involves a territory petitioning for statehood, followed by congressional approval and the President's signature.
Congress
According to Article IV, Section 3, it states that "New states may be admitted by the Congress into this Union..."
"Admit to"
The Department of State is the President's right arm in both formulation and execution of United States foreign policy.
New Zealand does not belong, since the other three are Australian states while New Zealand is a country in its own right.
Clear Admit is the name of an organization that helps people find places in colleges and universities. Clear Admit can help you write a resume and find the school that will be right for you.
The executive department has varied between a federal and a states right approach. The most recent trend is to establish the program federally and ask that states implement it. The states are given the freedom to determine how to implement it. The balance between states and the federal government is precarious.
women never admit that they wrong cause they always right
Contact the Immigration Department of the United States or locally. They have a list of legal assistance and what it does apply to and can guide you in the right direction.
It is always right to admit if you have made a mistake. A company may tell employees to never admit fault in a situation but to rather focus on the solution. It is best when working in sales to know policy.
How about "statistician"? But I admit that the spelling is a challenge to get right !
maybe its hard for her to admit it because its not true....and as to what u should do, do whatever feels right to you