However, government ministers, the devolved assemblies, local authorities, quangos and all public bodies will be subject to the Convention. |
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They charged that his delay to fire ministers he found wanting was proof enough that his word could not be relied upon. |
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Speaking of sports ministers, it seems they all have a knack for putting their foot in it. |
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When ministers start judging the public by what they do with their spare time, the interest is often reciprocated. |
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Apart from the gymnasium, swimming pool and sauna, ministers could indulge in a spot of white-water rafting and windsurfing if they desired. |
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His preference to work with the bureaucracy and junior ministers was honed during 12 years as chief minister of Gujarat. |
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The move has provoked accusations that Executive ministers are acting to silence a vocal critic. |
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Why one of the best ministers in the government has to walk the plank is not clear. |
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The appointment of Cabinet ministers, junior ministers, senior staff to committees etc allows the party leadership huge powers of patronage. |
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The submission also urged ministers to ditch plans by which they would no longer be accountable to the judiciary. |
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Unlike cabinet ministers, junior ministers do not have state cars with garda drivers. |
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I knew Labour Ministers lie a bit, but accusing two ministers in one week of hypocrisy is a bit much. |
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This is already the case for ministers of state, who employ their drivers on a fixed wage. |
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It has paid lobbyists to persuade government ministers to lift restrictions on operating casinos. |
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Some ministers are known to be receptive to the idea of tolls, provided they are only applied to new roads. |
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Two years ago, British ministers unveiled plans to allow TV cameras to film appeal court hearings and judicial reviews. |
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The scientist-hero of the story then begins throwing his weight around, bending ministers to his will. |
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I can't speak for other ministers, but I arrange my life in such a way that I do my red boxes in the office, using the internet. |
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From early morning the ministers, junior ministers, TD, senators and MEPs arrived to hear how they were going to turn the Nice campaign around. |
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One minister has seemingly confirmed such a meeting took place but other ministers don't recollect it. |
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It is all the more important, therefore, that ministers adopt the report's recommendations. |
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Pastors, ministers, rabbis, imans, etc influence large audiences in their weekly sermons. |
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Excellent ministers, who have helped improve this country greatly over the past seven years, let me have it with both barrels. |
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They did not need churches or ministers for worship, they recognized no external authority, and they recognized no social rank. |
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Apart from senior and junior ministers, other top government officials from various ministries will attend. |
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The potential gains will include former ministers, junior ministers, TDs, and existing senators and other prominent candidates. |
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It was a habit left over from the old days when the king and his ministers were thus warned of danger. |
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The scheme is part of an attempt by ministers to wean young Scots off their traditional diet of chips, sugary drinks, crisps and chocolate. |
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The report was adopted at the top security meeting of ministers in charge of defense and foreign affairs. |
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Already, ministers and junior ministers must give up their council seats upon joining the Cabinet or junior minister ranks. |
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Women now have the right to be ministers of the Eucharist and readers of the Word, but not priests. |
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The solemn work went on during the forenoon, and again in the afternoon, and was continued in the evening until all the ministers present had adhibited their names. |
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British prime ministers, of course, are elected based on which party wins the most seats in the House of commons. |
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A radical agenda and innovative ideas for a second term of Labour-led government are being thrashed out by ministers and senior party figures in private this weekend. |
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We hold dialogues and discussion groups with all faiths and enjoy the opportunity to work alongside of rabbis, ministers, preachers and priests everywhere. |
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Other ministers have repeatedly kicked all proposals into the long grass. |
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In spite of these quibbles, Lancaster's book should prove a valuable resource to ministers and serious laity who are willing to grapple with issues of biblical authority. |
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It was through this work that Bensoussan discovered there was a demand for ministers to perform weddings at jails and prisons. |
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In the Narasimha Rao years, the issue was raked up when the Prime Minister held the post of the party president, and several chief ministers did not give up PCC presidentship. |
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It is so easy for prime ministers to lose touch with reality. |
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Parish directors and lay ministers are asked to prepare candidates for baptism or marriage, then to step aside when a priest arrives to administer the sacraments. |
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It also revealed that relevant ministers in Russia have now consented to accession to ASEAN's core Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia. |
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All the ministers, as well as the Financial Secretary, spoke in supporting the need for the bill, which received its three readings and finally passed unopposed. |
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The commune refused to be disbanded and, after hints from Robespierre at the Jacobins, tried to have a number of hostile deputies and ministers arrested. |
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Mr Denham's departure was the third blow of a triple whammy that saw Leader of the House Robin Cook and two junior ministers, including Mr Denham, quit their jobs. |
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They came together in a variety of salons, private academies, libraries and the like, enjoying the discreet but effective patronage of princes, ministers, and aristocrats. |
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Throughout the eighteen years of Conservative government, the total number of Cabinet ministers with children in the state system could be counted on the fingers of one hand. |
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The event was timed to coincide with a World Bank meeting in Washington tomorrow, where finance ministers from across the world will discuss aid for basic education. |
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He opposes parliamentary government, control of taxation by the House of Deputies, and responsibility of ministers to the parliaments, rather than the king and kaiser. |
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Last weekend, the cattiest of Hollande's ministers went a step too far, slamming France's economic policy, and was finally ousted. |
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This means MPs and ministers have little capacity to be influenced by improper pressure. |
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Parliamentary Questions can be tabled for ministers in either house of Parliament for either written or oral reply. |
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Cabinet ministers must respond, either themselves or through a deputy, although the answers do not always fully answer the question. |
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Dioceses are divided into parishes, each with one or more priests, deacons or lay ecclesial ministers. |
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These are not ordained, nor generally considered ministers unless also engaged in one of the lay minister categories above. |
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Accepting women Protestant ministers would also make unity with the See of Rome more difficult. |
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The Primitive Methodists were poorly funded and had trouble building chapels or schools, and supporting ministers. |
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At one time, ministers had to take a pledge not to drink and encouraged their congregations to do the same. |
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In 2005 there were around 3,600 ordained ministers in the Methodist Church. |
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Christ's ministers in the church are stewards in the household of God and shepherds of his flock. |
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A chair was, at first, a superintendent of a circuit within the district, but now ministers are appointed exclusively to the role. |
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It has over 2000 members, including some 400 ministers, and exercises increasing influence. |
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One of its ministers, Robert McEvoy, is secretary of an evangelical and creationist pressure group, the Caleb Foundation. |
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More vigorously suppressed the travelling country ministers who used Tyndale's English translation of the New Testament. |
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Following the department's dissolution, it no longer has ministers responsible. |
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Belloc took a leading role in denouncing the Marconi scandal of 1912, in which government ministers were caught insider trading. |
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Although the king was eager for war in Europe, his ministers were more cautious. |
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Without conferring with his British ministers, George stationed them in Hanover to prevent enemy French troops from marching into the electorate. |
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He was often able to prevent the appointment of ministers or commanders he disliked, or sideline them into lesser offices. |
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The Micawber rules of debt as ruin oppressed ministers as much as individuals. |
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Rasmussen became the leader of a cabinet which, unusually, consisted entirely of ministers from his own party. |
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The government is led by the Prime Minister, who selects all the remaining ministers. |
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For most senior ministers this is usually the elected House of Commons rather than the House of Lords. |
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The politics of the state had a number of advisors and ministers gathered around a council known as Divan. |
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There are also departmental questions when ministers answer questions relating to their specific departmental brief. |
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Having expressed her views, The Queen abides by the advice of her ministers. |
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The First Minister, Scottish cabinet ministers and Law officers sit in the front row, in the middle section of the chamber. |
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Junior ministers, who do not attend cabinet, are also appointed to assist Scottish ministers in their departments. |
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Ministerial powers can be conferred by an Act of the Assembly and ministers can also exercise executive powers which are vested in the Crown. |
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The number of ministers and their responsibilities can be changed when a department is being established or dissolved. |
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The Taoiseach can also direct the President to dismiss or accept the resignation of individual ministers. |
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Government ministers are collectively responsible for the actions of the government. |
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In 1956, the British and French prime ministers, Sir Anthony Eden and Guy Mollet, discussed the possibility of France joining the Commonwealth. |
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The Queen again came under criticism for appointing the prime minister on the advice of a small number of ministers or a single minister. |
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The government is a Council of Ministers, consisting of a Chief Minister and nine ministers. |
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In an exception to the usual rule of cabinet collective responsibility, Cameron allowed cabinet ministers to campaign publicly for EU withdrawal. |
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The first of the tables below lists the member entities and their heads of government, finance ministers and central bank governors. |
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In exercising these powers the monarch normally defers to the advice of the prime minister or other ministers. |
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The prime minister and all other ministers take office immediately upon appointment by the monarch. |
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Living at French expense, he continued to petition ministers for commitment to another invasion, to their increasing irritation. |
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Quaker and Methodist ministers particularly urged slaveholders to free their slaves. |
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By convention, all ministers must be members of the House of Commons or of the House of Lords. |
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In some communities it was customary for ministers and priests to preach anticircus sermons in all churches on the Sunday preceding the circus. |
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These ministers were at first confined to the three orders of bishops, priests, and deacons. |
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Hours before his climb down, the premier's own cabinet ministers had vigorously defended the curriculum. |
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Why then did not the ministers use their new law? Because they durst not, because they could not. |
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There is also a 'databox' of key economic statistics and a list of government ministers. |
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There are also twelve other ministers, who work alongside the cabinet secretaries in their appointed areas. |
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The Assembly must elect a First Minister, who selects ministers to form the Welsh Government. |
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In practice these are always exercised by the monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister and the other ministers of HM Government. |
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Most of the Scottish commissioners favoured union, and about half were government ministers and other officials. |
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Their ministers and residents here have perpetually importuned the court with unreasonable demands. |
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Finding the affairs of the realm in disorder, he purged the royal administration of a great number of ministers and judges. |
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The financial demands of the Hundred Years' War were enormous, and the king and his ministers tried different methods of covering the expenses. |
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Two days after Henry's coronation, he arrested his father's two most unpopular ministers, Sir Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley. |
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Henry also returned to the public some of the money supposedly extorted by the two ministers. |
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The Church of England has 18,000 active ordained clergy and 10,000 licensed lay ministers. |
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It allowed ministers to marry, banned images from churches, and confirmed Elizabeth as Supreme Governor of the Church of England. |
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A conformist, he imposed a degree of obedience on the clergy that apparently alarmed even the Queen's ministers, such as Lord Burghley. |
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Most ordained ministers in the Anglican Communion are priests, who usually work in parishes within a diocese. |
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This move, while saving Buckingham, reinforced the impression that Charles wanted to avoid Parliamentary scrutiny of his ministers. |
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It fell to the Queen to appoint Harold Macmillan as the new prime minister, after taking the advice of ministers. |
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In modern times, the vast majority of ministers belong to the Commons rather than the Lords. |
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Equally, some junior ministers below Cabinet level may be invited to all Cabinet meetings as a matter of course. |
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Junior ministers are also often members of these committees, in addition to Secretaries of State. |
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Government ministers and the leader of the Opposition and the Shadow Cabinet sit on the front rows, and are known as frontbenchers. |
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Ministers, junior ministers and parliamentary private secretaries who vote against the whips' instructions usually resign. |
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In the spring of 1710, Anne dismissed Godolphin and the Junto ministers, replacing them with Tories. |
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Senior ministers Pombal in Portugal and Struensee in Denmark also governed according to Enlightenment ideals. |
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This was not received well by the King's ministers, and Necker, hoping to bolster his position, argued to be made a minister. |
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The King had to share power with the elected Legislative Assembly, but he retained his royal veto and the ability to select ministers. |
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The defeat heightened dissension and escalated political antagonism to the King's ministers. |
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George was also perceived as favouring Tory ministers, which led to his denunciation by the Whigs as an autocrat. |
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The ministers agreed to drop the measure then pending, but refused to bind themselves in the future. |
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Nonconformist ministers in their own chapels were allowed to marry couples if a registrar was present. |
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In election after election, Protestant ministers rallied their congregations to the Liberal ticket. |
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Many former Chartists went on to become journalists, poets, ministers, and councillors. |
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There are also regular meetings of finance ministers, law ministers, health ministers, etc. |
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Suspended members are not represented at meetings of Commonwealth leaders and ministers, although they remain members of the organisation. |
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About twenty of the most senior government ministers make up the Cabinet and approximately 100 ministers in total comprise the government. |
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The party often is the only party in the United Kingdom to have ever had not one, but two female prime ministers. |
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In the Kingdom of Great Britain, the monarch, in theory, chaired cabinet and chose ministers. |
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Additionally, prime ministers may lose their positions if they lose their seats in parliament, even though they may still be popular nationally. |
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During the reign of the next monarch, Richard II, the Commons once again began to impeach errant ministers of the Crown. |
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There are usually a number of former prime ministers and former members of the European Commission. |
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The RDA and the leader's board were to jointly produce a new Single Regional Strategy, with ministers exercising an oversight function. |
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It is governed by UK government ministers and legislated for by the UK parliament. |
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The allocation and transfer of responsibilities between ministers and departments is also generally at the Prime Minister's discretion. |
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Some of them may be Privy Counsellors, or may be appointed to the Privy Council as a mark of distinction, without becoming Cabinet ministers. |
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In practice, Cabinet ministers will usually have a junior minister to represent their department in the House of Lords. |
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One of the ministers, the leader of the majority political party, is appointed premier by the governor. |
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Under the principle of collective responsibility, all ministers are obliged to support in the Assembly any measures approved by Cabinet. |
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Nevertheless, prime ministers can usually do only as much as public opinion and the balance of party membership of parliament will let them do. |
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Most Cabinet ministers are from the House of Commons rather than the House of Lords. |
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The House of Lords remains a source for junior ministers and members of government. |
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Under modern constitutional conventions, the sovereign acts on the advice of his or her ministers. |
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The first Hanoverian monarch, George I, relied on his ministers to a greater extent than did previous monarchs. |
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However, George IV reluctantly granted his assent upon the advice of his ministers. |
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A convention of the constitution, the modern Cabinet is a group of ministers who formulate policies. |
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Throughout the 19th century, governments led from the Lords had often suffered difficulties governing alongside ministers who sat in the Commons. |
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Lastly, the head of state is in turn required to effectuate his executive power only through these responsible ministers. |
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The Prime Minister, Cabinet ministers and the Leader of HM Opposition are traditionally sworn of the Privy Council upon appointment. |
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The Ministry should not be confused with the Cabinet, as ministers of the Crown may exist outside of this committee. |
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The following are the present ministries of some of the Commonwealth realms, which list the incumbent ministers of the Crown. |
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Nine of Cameron's ministers, including several prominent members, were sacked or resigned from their posts. |
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Members of the Cabinet and junior ministers of the Scottish Government as well as the Scottish law officers, are appointed by the First Minister. |
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The government consists of cabinet secretaries, who attend cabinet meetings, and ministers who do not, and also of a counsel general. |
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Following separation, the Welsh ministers exercise functions in their own right. |
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The assembly's functions, including that of making subordinate legislation, in the main, transferred to the Welsh ministers upon separation. |
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Of the 95 Stormont MPs who did not become cabinet ministers, 87 were Orangemen. |
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The relationship often depends on the personal relations between British prime ministers and US presidents. |
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The two ministers also signed an unpublished memorandum of understanding at the same time. |
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Additionally, there are regular meetings that deal with specific sectors and are attended by the corresponding ministers. |
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The Minister for Defence and several subordinate ministers exercise this control through the Australian Defence Organisation. |
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The Prime Minister may delegate to other ministers the right to countersign these decisions of the President. |
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Article 42 defines the Government as the Monarch and the ministers, and that only ministers are responsible for acts of government. |
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However, since the whips no longer have any effective ministerial roles in the Treasury, they are usually not listed as Treasury ministers. |
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At HM Treasury the Chancellor is supported by a political team of four junior ministers and by permanent civil servants. |
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They broke off from the Church of England in 1811, ordaining their own ministers. |
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The permission for the ordination of women given in 1974 was rescinded in 1991 without affecting the two or three existing woman ministers. |
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Until the 20th century, only men had been eligible for ordination as elders or ministers of the word and sacrament. |
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When there is a larger number of ordained ministers than ruling elders, additional ruling elders are appointed to redress the imbalance. |
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Future prime ministers may struggle to replicate the sort of muscular countrywide support that Modi was able to earn. |
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The ministers of the republic, mortal enemies of his name, came every day to pay their feigned civilities. |
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The Emir appoints the prime minister, who in turn chooses the ministers comprising the government. |
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The parliament is often rigorous in holding the government accountable, government ministers are frequently interpellated and forced to resign. |
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According to the prime minister of Somalia, to improve transparency, Cabinet ministers fully disclosed their assets and signed a code of ethics. |
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Furthermore, unnecessary trips abroad by members of government were prohibited, and all travel by ministers required the Premier's consent. |
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The members of the government are the Prime Minister, Deputy ministers and other ministers. |
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The cabinet usually consists of 13 to 16 ministers and a varying number of state secretaries. |
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The Prime Minister is a primus inter pares, with no explicit powers beyond those of the other ministers. |
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It is headed by the Prime Minister of Finland, and consists of him or her, of other ministers, and of the Chancellor of Justice. |
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The president appoints a council of ministers, who are not required to be elected members of the legislature. |
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The result was an abandonment of the educational programme, ministers remained poorly paid and the church was underfunded. |
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The First Book of Discipline envisaged the establishment of reformed ministers in each of approximately 1,080 parishes. |
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By the 1590s Scotland was organized into about fifty presbyteries with about twenty ministers in each. |
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Knox and five other ministers were called upon to draw up a new confession of faith. |
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Before the dissolution of Parliament, Knox and the other ministers were given the task of organising the newly reformed church or the Kirk. |
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This succeeded in luring many ministers away from the struggle, but those remaining became more determined. |
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They controlled the local Anglican church, choosing ministers and handling church property and disbursing local charity. |
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Nearly all the religious denominations set up their own schools and colleges to train ministers. |
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Another important form of resistance was in rejecting ministers appointed by the landlords. |
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On 22 June, he and his ministers tendered their resignations to the Queen, who invited the Unionist leader, Lord Salisbury, to form a government. |
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He had prepared a sustentation fund scheme for the support of the seceding ministers. |
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A further meeting was held on 23 May for the Signing of the Act of Separation by the ministers. |
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The first task of the new church was to provide income for her initial 500 ministers and places of worship for her people. |
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Wellington was also the only field marshal to become Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, though several others served as cabinet ministers. |
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The book set out a system of church order that included superintendents, ministers, doctors, elders and deacons. |
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The official inauguration only occurred in 1942 with the presence of the president of the republic, governors, and ministers. |
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Further, the preaching of ministers about God is the very Word of God because God is considered to be speaking through them. |
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A number of ministers insisted on recording their dissent over the decision. |
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It is led by the First Minister of Scotland, who selects the cabinet secretaries and ministers and defines their areas of responsibility. |
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If Westminster legislation would expand or contract the powers of Scottish Parliament or its ministers, this too requires consent from Edinburgh. |
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He appoints ministers, including a Prime Minister, that have the confidence of the Chamber of Representatives to form the federal government. |
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Bonar Law had written to Lloyd George that ministers must soon decide whether or not the offensive was to continue. |
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Following the revolt, Henry ruled England personally, rather than governing through senior ministers. |
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For the next 24 years, Henry ruled the kingdom personally, rather than through senior ministers. |
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This resulted in prominent Conservative ministers being unseated from their constituencies, including former Prime Minister Arthur Balfour. |
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This church maintained an interracial identity until 1924 when the white ministers withdrew to form the Pentecostal Church, Incorporated. |
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Lewis was the son and grandson of prominent Welsh Calvinistic Methodist ministers. |
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As of this day too, the Seventh Development Cabinet is outgoing and to the ministers I express my thanks. |
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Shadow ministers portfolios can differ from government departments therefore overlap. |
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Also, eucharistic ministers take the sacramental elements to the sick in hospitals and nursing homes. |
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It has approximately 56,000 members in 1,400 congregations with 608 active ministers, including 13 church related community workers. |
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The Church of England had difficulty filling the vacancies caused by the ejection of so many ministers. |
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In some cases, ministers continued to baptise, marry, and preach in the parish church, quite illegally. |
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Slaves also created their own religious observances, meeting alone without the supervision of their white masters or ministers. |
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In May 2006, Budhia was temporarily banned from running by the ministers of child welfare, as his life could be at risk. |
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Under the constitution of 1868, executive power is exercised by the Grand Duke and the cabinet, which consists of several other ministers. |
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In May 238, soldiers of the II Parthica in his camp assassinated him, his son, and his chief ministers. |
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But three months later, Stilicho and the chief ministers of his party were treacherously slain on Honorius' orders. |
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These account themselves the ministers of the Gods, and the horses privy to his will. |
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But access to ministers is not the only reason right-of-centre policy wonks are excited. |
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The president appoints and heads a cabinet of ministers, which must be approved by the Parliament. |
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The prime minister is the head of government and proposes other ministers and secretaries of state. |
|
The Executive Power is exercised by the president and a cabinet of 13 ministers. |
|
The Chief Minister presides over a meeting of State Executive Council ministers weekly at the Chief Minister's office. |
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Admitted to the Dutch Reformed Church and married by its ministers, their children could be baptized. |
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He refused to attend morning meetings, see his ministers or act upon memoranda. |
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Many of his powerful ministers were opposed, and this led to a clash between sovereign and ministers that lasted more than 15 years. |
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In January 2012, ASEAN tourism ministers called for the development of a marketing strategy. |
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Meetings focus mostly on specific topics, such as defence or the environment, and are attended by ministers, instead of heads of government. |
|
In January 2011 ASEAN foreign ministers agreed to bid to host the FIFA World Cup in 2030 as a single entity. |
|
Attended by ministers from twelve countries, the meeting concluded with commitments for future annual meetings in Singapore and Korea. |
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In the 19th century, some British prime ministers still spoke with some regional features, such as William Ewart Gladstone. |
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His Biblical ideal of congregations choosing their own ministers had proved unworkable. |
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On 26 November, the two ministers hotly debated the council over the issue. |
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The libertines continued organizing opposition, insulting the appointed ministers, and challenging the authority of the Consistory. |
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The ministers continued to protest, and as in the case of Servetus, the opinions of the Swiss churches were sought. |
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The material for the commentaries often originated from lectures to students and ministers that he reworked for publication. |
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By the 18th century, Puritanism was in decline and many ministers were alarmed at the loss of religious piety. |
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What did change was that bishops were now seen to be ministers of the Crown for the spiritual government of its subjects. |
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British Methodism holds that all ordained ministers are equal in terms of spirituality. |
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At the same time, the Adopting Act allowed candidates and ministers to scruple articles within the Confession. |
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Doors were also opened for reformation in other places by ministers who supported him. |
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This was done so that ELCA ministers ordained by these ELCA bishops could also serve in the Episcopal Church. |
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Within six months of its founding in 1873, the REC grew to about 1,500 communicants, two bishops and 15 other ministers. |
|
By 1910 there were 28 ministers and 1,990 communicant members constituting the Reformed Episcopal Church in that country. |
|
They also have the authority to appoint and ordain local pastors, elders, ministers, and reverends within the denomination. |
|
All ministers are credentialed at one of three levels of licensure, the most senior of which is the rank of Ordained Bishop. |
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As one of the King's ministers, the Lord Chancellor attended the curia regis or Royal Court. |
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The highest level ministers must have been tested and have successfully demonstrated integrity in all situations and all types of allurements. |
|
It soon reached a national level, by consulting legislators, ministers and journalists. |
|
To further their deliberations, they invite government ministers, senior officials, and experts in the matter being discussed. |
|
In a very similar way, the Council of the European Union is composed of national ministers. |
|
Some jurisdictions, with a large number of ministers, may designate ministers to be either in the inner or outer ministry or cabinet. |
|
Normally the leader of the majority party becomes the prime minister, or an office of equivalent function, and selects the other ministers. |
|
In the Westminster system, these ministers continue to represent their constituency in parliament while being part of the government. |
|
This would see a War Council of three, the two Service ministers and a third without portfolio. |
|
Asquith discussed the crisis with Lord Crewe and they agreed an early meeting with the Unionist ministers was essential. |
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The manner of his appointment was controversial, and two of Macmillan's cabinet ministers refused to take office under him. |
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Macmillan was one of the few ministers brave enough to tell Churchill to his face that it was time for him to retire. |
|
This contrasted with the Treasury ministers who argued that support of sterling required spending cuts and, probably, a rise in unemployment. |
|
Some ministers viewed Blair's announcement of policy initiatives in September 2006 as an attempt to draw attention away from these issues. |
|
Blair reportedly indicated that he did not want the traditional knighthood or peerage bestowed on former prime ministers. |
|
Written questions tabled to ministers by members of the legislature on the previous day are listed at the back of the order paper. |
|
He tried to ask the government ministers awkward questions supporting his case, but they were disallowed by the Lord Chief Justice. |
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He complained of the evasive conduct of ministers and government apathy and complacency on factory reform. |
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The Han dynasty Records of the Grand Historian records that it had already become a place of pilgrimage for ministers. |
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Emphasizing knowledge of the Fa among the people, he proposed an elaborate system for its distribution to allow them to hold ministers to it. |
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Fa is not partial to the noble, does not exclude ministers, and does not discriminate against the common people. |
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In practice, this means that the ruler must be isolated from his ministers. |
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The elevation of ministers endangers the ruler, with which he must be kept strictly apart. |
|
On behalf of Ch'u, Wu Ch'i issued order to reduce the nobility and their emoluments, and the meritorious ministers revolted. |
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The state has had many Maratha government ministers and officials, as well as in local municipal commissions, and panchayats. |
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He was the last of the London dissenting ministers who officiated in a wig. |
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He has ducked questions in Parliament on everything from Afghan detainees to Radarsat 2, leaving them to be stickhandled by other ministers. |
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My ministers are Anglophiles, my generals are Germanophiles, my people are Russophiles, and I am the only one who has remained a Bulgarophile. |
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The BBC reported that ministers all chipped in an equal amount. |
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Pawar continued to target Patil at Cabinet meetings, joined by Congress ministers Narayan Rane and Patangrao Kadam. |
|
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With Kataria remaining absent, the allocation of work for the junior ministers has not begun. |
|
Reportedly, some of the junior ministers do not attend office regularly as they don't have any work to do. |
|
First Minister Dewar yesterday completed the line-up of his government team with the appointment of 11 junior ministers. |
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Pallam Raju, Dinsha Patel, Harish Rawat and Ashwani Kumar were all junior ministers who have been promoted. |
|
On 24 August, MacDonald submitted the resignation of his ministers and led his senior colleagues in forming the new National Government. |
|
Like the Commission, the Council of ministers has, relatively, lost power due to Treaty of Lisbon. |
|
The European Council officially gains the status of an EU institution, thus being separated from the Council of ministers. |
|
Parliament would need to be consulted again if the Council of ministers deviated too far from the initial proposal. |
|
This award had previously been given to all prime ministers since the Second World War. |
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Spitting Image, a British TV show, satirised Thatcher as a bully who ridiculed her own ministers. |
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The government consists of cabinet secretaries, who attend cabinet meetings, and ministers, who do not. |
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It is led by the first minister, who selects the cabinet secretaries and ministers with approval of parliament. |
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The Scottish Cabinet is the group of ministers who are collectively responsible for all Scottish Government policy. |
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Scottish Government also includes a civil service that supports the Scottish ministers. |
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The seven ministers are voted into office by the 18 elected members of the Legislative Assembly of the Cayman Islands. |
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The British received an Olive Branch Petition written by the Second Continental Congress dated July 8, 1775, imploring the King to reverse the policies of his ministers. |
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The Governor of each presidency or province represented the Crown in his capacity, and was assisted by a ministers appointed from the members of each provincial legislature. |
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This decision came after mounting pressure for a free vote for ministers. |
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With a growing suspicion of his ministers and subjects, Hongwu established the Jinyiwei, a network of secret police drawn from his own palace guard. |
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Xuanzong bowed to the consensus of his ministers on policy decisions and made efforts to staff government ministries fairly with different political factions. |
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