No, they do not. The Prime Minister is the Head of Government.
the prime minister or president
In a Parliamentary government, the Executive branch is made up of the Prime Minister or Premier, and that official's cabinet. The Prime Minister and Cabinet are themselves members of the legislative branch, the Parliament.
A member of parliament (MP) is someone who has been elected to sit in Parliament. A minister is an MP with some executive power. All ministers are in charge of a department of the government. Together they make up the Cabinet, which the Prime Minister is in charge of.
The Democratic party is in power right now in the Parliament. Our Prime minister is Sali Berisha.
In parliamentary systems, the power to dissolve parliament typically lies with the head of state or the prime minister. The head of state may grant the prime minister the authority to dissolve parliament, or they may do so themselves on the advice of the prime minister.
Actually, the answer is the prime minister, not the monarch. I'm also taking Civics ^^
Parliament (holds the legislative power). The majority party choses a prime minister. The prime minister makes a government of ministers for the executive tasks.
The British Prime Minister has considerable power, provided the his or hers Government and ministers, and back benchers lend their support. And they must also gain the majority in any vote taken in the Houses of Parliament.
parliament or coalition government. They are responsible for making key decisions and policies, representing the country at home and abroad, and overseeing the government's functioning. The Prime Minister holds significant power and is accountable for their actions to the parliament and the people.
The British system concentrates power in the hands of the Parliament, which is made up of elected Members of Parliament (MPs) and the House of Lords. The Prime Minister, who is the leader of the ruling party in Parliament, holds significant executive power in terms of running the government.
Well technically the queen / governor general, but the power they hold over our government is really long gone. So in reality, no one controls them. Additional. But if they perform badly they are likely to be chucked out at the next election. Individuals (Prime Ministers) can be removed by their own party, e.g. Margaret Thatcher, or the PM will remove a Cabinet Minister if he's not doing a good job. But they are not removed as Members of Parliament, only as functionaries within the Government.
The public elect their Members of Parliament (MPs)... The MP's elect a leader... The Leader of the party becomes Prime Minister if their party gains the most votes in a general election.