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  • physical representation vs. virtual representation in Parliament
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Q: What were core constitutional principle over which the colonists and the ministers in parliament disagreed?
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What is the role of the crown at state level parliament?

One of the main roles of the governor ( the representative of the crown at the state level) is to give royal assent to acts of parliament. Royal assent is the signing of a proposed law. It is necessary before an act of parliament can become law. It uis normally given as a matter of course on the advice of the prime ministers and ministers.


What do early colonial governments have in common?

If they have colonies, then that is an easier one to answer. If they have colonies, most had separate branches for them, and had a system to get them directly to the main parliament. If without colonies, they had a parliament and a set of ministers.


What did puritan dissenters like roger Williams have to do with the development of self government in the colonies?

In the 1600s, English Puritans settled in New England. People in their communities obeyed the rules of the Bible. Puritan religion shaped the government of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. All settlers had to go to church. A town meeting was held once a year. Only men with property could vote on laws for their town. Puritan towns had more self-government than most colonies. Some colonists thought Puritans should not tell them what to believe or how to act. Roger Williams was a dissenter. He did not believe the government should make laws about religion. Williams wanted religious freedom. The Puritans banished him from Massachusetts Bay. In 1636, Williams started a new colony that became Rhode Island. Rhode Island's government was separate from the church. Anne Hutchinson also disagreed with Puritan ministers. She held meetings that allowed men and women to discuss religion. Puritans did not think women should teach men about religion. Hutchinson was banished and went to Rhode Island. Thomas Hooker also disagreed with the Puritans. He wanted to start a place where men who did not belong to the church could vote. He started the colony of Connecticut. Other colonists settled the area that became New Hampshire and Maine. Conflicts over Land The Puritans lived on American Indian land. Colonists bought the land from the Indians and expected them to leave. Indians believed land could be shared, but not owned. Colonists and the Pequot Indians fought over the land. Colonists killed most of the Pequot Indians and took their land. More colonists arrived. The Wampanoag Indian leader Metacomet, called King Philip, felt his people had to defend their land. In 1675, another war began. A year later the colonists won King Philip's War. They enslaved some Wampanoags and forced the rest to leave. Few American Indians remained in eastern New England after the war


First priminist of the US?

The USA does not have prime ministers. The first president was George Washington.


Who were famous abolitionists before the Civil War?

They were Jeffery Sirdick and John Jizzeretti. They were Italian ministers who migrated here in 1805 to get religous freedom.

Related questions

Do people vote for prime ministers in a constitutional monarchy?

No, constitutional monarchies are parliamentary systems. The public elect parliament.


Are the ministers of Romania elected or chosen?

First, people are elected to parliament. The winners of the election can form a government. Ministers are then chosen by the prime minister and they are then ratified by a vote in parliament. So they are elected to parliament and then could be chosen to be ministers.


Are the members of the executive branch members of Parliament?

Most Ministers and all parliamentary secretaries are Members of Parliament. Those Ministers who aren't MPs are Senators. The Governor General and civil servants are not Members of Parliament.


Which of these can summon and dismiss the Parliament of the United Kingdom and the ministers?

Monarch


Name of ministers in Indian parliament?

dr monmohan sing


Difference between ministers of Parliament and members of 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.


What was the purpose of sending the cabinet ministers to India?

The cabinet ministers were sent to india by the british parliament for preparing a constitution for india


Who chooses the cabinet of ministers on UK?

The UK government, or parliament, makes such decisions.


How big of a government does Scotland have?

The parliament has 129 members and there are 18 ministers of government.


Are Cabinet Ministers elected or appointed?

Cabinet Ministers are primarily elected as Members of Parliament, and subsequently appointed by the Prime Minister as members of the cabinet.


How did George III ideas about differ form those of his prime ministers?

George the third found it difficult to the need to choose first ministers who enjoyed the backing of Parliament and later in his reign to adapt to the realization of a parliamentary monarchy. When he came to the throne he was determined to play a leading political role and distance himself from his grandfather's ministers. It was until 1770 that he found the man who could control Parliament. Until then there had been a series of short term ministers whose Prime Ministers couldn't juggle politics with the backing of the crown and Parliament.


What is theExecutive branch?

The government: prime minister and the ministers - they execute the laws made by Parliament.