There is no set term. Stephen Harper will remain the Prime Minister of Canada until he resigns or the Conservatives lose government.
The Prime Minister of Canada is Justin Trudeau. Canada is a monarchy under Queen Elizabeth II, and thus has a governor general instead of a president. The current Governor General of Canada is David Johnston.
Pierre Trudeau was elected into office twice and served as Prime Minister of Canada from 20 April 1968 to 4 June 1979 and then again from 3 March 1980 to 30 June 1984. Joe Clark was the Prime Minister in the brief period between Trudeau's two terms. Since 6 February 2006 Canada's PM has been Stephen Harper.
Pierre Trudeau was elected into office twice and served as Prime Minister of Canada from 20 April 1968 to 4 June 1979 and then again from 3 March 1980 to 30 June 1984. Joe Clark was the Prime Minister in the brief period between Trudeau's two terms. Since 6 February 2006 Canada's PM has been Stephen Harper.
No. Some Prime Ministers name a Deputy Prime Minister to answer general policy questions during Question Period, and to chair Cabinet meetings in their absence. A Deputy Prime Minister does not have any special authority, and there is no significance in terms of succession, as this is instead specified by an acting ministers minute[1]. Usually, the appointment is used to honour an individual minister, or to recognize a demographic to which the Deputy belongs (region, race, gender...). The current Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, has not named a Deputy Prime Minister.
If counting by terms, the 91st Prime Minister of Japan is Fukudu Yasao, the 58th person to be the Prime Minister of Japan.
he served two separate terms as the country's prime minister
Only when it is a title, ex. the Prime Minister of Canada. But in general terms it should not be capitalized.
She was the 37th prime minister of New Zealand for 3 terms from 1999 to 2008.
She remained as the Prime Minister of India for three consecutive terms from 1966-1977 and a fourth term during which she was assassinated.
In Russia, the Prime Minister isn't elected and does not serve a specific term length. He or she is appointed by the President and can be let go any time the President chooses. If a new president is elected, then the Prime Minister must resign, and a new Prime Minister will be appointed by the new President.
In political terms, MPP means member of the provincial parliament. There are ten provincial parliaments in Canada, and they each have lots of members, so there is not just one MPP in Canada. Perhaps you would like to know who the Prime Minister of Canada is; at the present time (September 2011) it is Stephen Harper.