Its alright I suppose
parliament less power compare to executive
Veto Power
the parlamenterians in the parliament for bill makin, PM and ministers in executive affairs and court-judges judiciary power
A "rubber stamp parliament" refers to a legislative body that primarily approves decisions or policies made by the executive branch without meaningful debate or scrutiny. This term often implies that the parliament lacks genuine independence and is merely endorsing the government's agenda, rather than acting as an effective check on power. Such parliaments can undermine democratic processes and accountability.
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.
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.
two-chamber parliament executive power given to the ruler
There are three arms of power: Legislative Power, Executive Power and Judicial Power. It is the Judicial Power (The Judges) that has the power to interpret and apply laws in Australia. Courts and judges are independent of parliament and government.
Legislature, executive and judiciary are the 3 systems or arms of power. The legislature (parliament) has the power to make or change laws. The judiciary (court) has the power to make judgements on if a person has broken a law or not. The executive eg. police, have the power to enforce laws. Neither of these arms of power can misuse their powers. eg. the legislature cannot decide if a person is guilty or not, neither can the judiciary enforce laws.
The Indian Parliament exercises control over the executive primarily through its power of oversight and accountability. This is achieved via mechanisms such as question sessions, debates, and parliamentary committees that scrutinize executive actions and policies. Additionally, the Parliament has the authority to pass legislation, approve budgets, and can hold the executive accountable through motions of no confidence or censure. Such controls ensure that the executive remains answerable to the elected representatives of the people.
The Legislature is responsible for proposing and passing legislation. The legislature is mainly comprised of Parliament which is Australia's sovereign law making body. The other two arms are, the Executive who is responsible for administering the legislation, and the Judicature/Judiciary who is responsible for adjudicating legal disputes. The Judiciary is comprised of the courts and the Executive is comprised of Government departments. The ministers in Parliament are both part of the Executive and Legislature, The Executive arm can pass by-laws/Ordinances/Regulations after the Legislature passes an enabling Act, granting the Executive the power to create the regulation, the regulations can only be made with the power specified in the enabling Act
Parliament (holds the legislative power). The majority party choses a prime minister. The prime minister makes a government of ministers for the executive tasks.