NZ Government is formed from a democratically elected House of Representatives. The Government advises our head of State who is the Queen of England. By convention, the Queen, the source of all executive legal authority in New Zealand, acts on the advice of the Government in all but the most exceptional circumstances. This system is known as a constitutional monarchy.
The representatives in the Parliament of India are elected by popular vote by their constituents in each Indian state or union territory. Each state has a fixed number of representatives based on population.
Yes, parliament does elect the prime minister.
it hapens every 5 year (tm)(copyright)
Within 4 years of the most recent election.
1947
Federal Government ( Parliament ) the Senate Provincial Government ( Legislature ) Local Government ( Mayors and Councillors for that city )
In 1859, Canadian politicians present a project for a Canadian confederation to British Parliament. In September 1864, the Charlottetown Conference takes place. In October 1864, the Quebec Conference takes place. In 1866, the London Conference takes place. In February 1867, the House of Lords and British House of Commons passed the British North America Act. It receives royal assent in March 1867 and went into effect on July 1, 1867.
Pride and Prejudice takes place in England.
The presidential election takes place in November of the years that are divisible by four.
The PRESIDENTIAL (not residential) election takes place this year, as every year, on Tuesday. (I am assuming you mean the USA election.)
That's Inauguration Day, when the winner of the election officially takes office.
In Parliament House in either the Senate of The House of Representatives.
the election always takes place on the 1st Tuesday of November so for the 2008 election it was on November 4th.
Every 2 years. So it will be 2018 when the next election takes place.
A general election takes place every five years.
By requesting an absentee ballot.
These are called primaries or primary elections. Not all states have them.
their successor takes their place, if no successor exists, there is a new election. see California Gubernatorial election in 2006
The 1952 election was a nationwide election.
Members of each political party choose a party leader by election within the parties. When a Canadian federal election takes place the leader of the party that has won the most seats in parliament becomes Prime Minister. If a party elects a new leader during a sitting of parliament then, most frequently, that leader will stand for election in a riding where he is very likely to be elected (a so-called 'safe seat'); much less frequently, the new leader will ask the governor general (the Queen's representative in Canada) to dissolve parliament thus necessitating a general election. So, the answer is no to both parts of the question.