The British Political SystemIndus Publishing House, 1966 - 192 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 11
... Crown ( or of ministers as ser- vants of the Crown ) ought to be exercised . " The seventeenth century witnessed the conflict between the King and Parliament . The issue at stake in that conflict was whether ultimate authority lay with ...
... Crown ( or of ministers as ser- vants of the Crown ) ought to be exercised . " The seventeenth century witnessed the conflict between the King and Parliament . The issue at stake in that conflict was whether ultimate authority lay with ...
Página 15
... Crown or the Queen and the Crown . The King is the person ; the Crown is an institution . The Crown is an office ; the King is the holder of that office . Kings and Queens are mortals ; they come and go , but the Crown is permanent ...
... Crown or the Queen and the Crown . The King is the person ; the Crown is an institution . The Crown is an office ; the King is the holder of that office . Kings and Queens are mortals ; they come and go , but the Crown is permanent ...
Página 97
... Crown was to have the power to create a limited number of life peers in each Parliament . The resolution was rejected because its main object seemed to have been to perpetuate a Conservative majority in the upper chamber . Salisbury ...
... Crown was to have the power to create a limited number of life peers in each Parliament . The resolution was rejected because its main object seemed to have been to perpetuate a Conservative majority in the upper chamber . Salisbury ...
Contenido
The Parliament | 84 |
Local SelfGovernment | 144 |
The British Judicial System | 153 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 1 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
administration amendments Annual Conference appointed Attlee authority become bodies Boroughs Britain British Civil Service British Constitution British Monarchy British Parliament British Political System candidate century Chairman Civil Servants collective responsibility Conservative Party Constituency Association Constituency Party consultation conventions Council criticism Crown debates decisions delegated legislation discussed election electoral England fact foreign form the Government functions hereditary House of Commons House of Lords impartiality important judges judicial King known Labour Party law-making Leader Liberal Party London Lord Chancellor matters meetings ment monarchy Money Bill National Executive Committee Opposition organization Parish Parliament Act Parliamentary Party party politics passed peerage peers policies political parties power of dissolution present Prime Minister Private Bills Professor Laski proposals Queen question Ramsay MacDonald reform resign rigid party discipline Royal Assent Scottish Affairs Committee Second Reading Secretary session Similarly Sovereign Speaker Standing Committees statutes tion Treasury two-party system vote Whips