The three branches of government is the Executive, the Legislative, and the Judiciary.
Constitutionally, (a.k.a. "technically"), the Executive power in Canada is vested in the Queen. In practice, the real executive power rests with the Cabinet. The Cabinet, which is Federal, includes the Prime Minister and Ministers (ex: Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Finance, etc.) who are answerable to Parliament for government activities.
The Legislative branch is comprised of the House of Commons (elected Members of Parliament), the Senate (appointed Senators), and the Monarch/Monarch representative (the Governor General). These three entities are commonly referred to as the "Parliament".
The Judiciary branch is simply comprised of the Federal judges who preside over the cases before the courts.
In the simplest of terms, the Executive branch is a select few members, or ministers, usually chosen from the governing party where as the Legislative branch is everyone else in Parliament. The Judiciary system is completely different. It is the foundation for the system of law in place in Canada, the presiding judges.
the Government of Canada, or the federal government
the Government of Ontario, or the provincial government
Canada has three branches of government: Executive, Legislative & Judicial.
The three levels of government are federal, provincial and municipal.
There is no territorial government of Canada. Since Canada is a federation there is a federal government. Canada's provinces are part of the federation and its territories are neither separate provincial entities nor fully federal but are quasi-federal. The three territories of Canada are: Northwest Territories; Yukon; and Nunavut.
Parliament of Canada is comprised of the House of Commons (elected members of Parliament), the Senate (Senators appointed by the Governor General on the advice of the prime minister), and the Queen of Canada (Her Majesty's representative is the Governor General). These three components together form Parliament.The three parts of Parliament are the Queen, the Senate, and the House of Commons.
The Conservative Party of Canada, as it presently exists (i.e., out of a merger of the Canadian Alliance and the Reform Party of Canada), has formed the Government of Canada since Febraury 6, 2006. As the party was created on December 7, 2003, it has only formed Government once (although that Government has now spanned three Parliaments).
the government
Canada has three branches of government: Executive, Legislative & Judicial.
federal government provincial government
Ancient Romes government was divided into three parts because of how stable they wanted it to be.
The three levels of government in Canada are:Municipal (towns, cities)Provincial/TerritorialFederal
three.
The three parts of Parliament are The Queen, The House of Commons and The Senate.
The three levels of government are federal, provincial and municipal.
The idea was for the three parts of government make sure that the government would not be run by tyrants. The three parts of government are Legislative Branch, Executive Branch and Judicial Branch.
There is no territorial government of Canada. Since Canada is a federation there is a federal government. Canada's provinces are part of the federation and its territories are neither separate provincial entities nor fully federal but are quasi-federal. The three territories of Canada are: Northwest Territories; Yukon; and Nunavut.
Consuls,Senate and assembly
Consuls,Senate and assembly