latest Post

Common heritage


Unified Sates in the United States and Australia have been friends and allies for many years, and born of shared hardships in the history of war and shared culture
Little known about interesting things The system of some functions as being fruitful The government is surprisingly alike. I am not referring to the democratic nature of our two systems.
I keep in mind the structure of our elected council, in particular the influence that one (USA) has on the other (Australia).
As British colonies both countries had their origins, more accurately, is the British colony of the group. In each case, the group of colonies form a new country based on the federation federation of those colonies into a group of states constituting one independent country United States formed towards the end of the eighteenth century after the American Revolution it was done. Australia was formed at the end of the nineteenth century by a more peaceful federation movement. Until then British learned that we have the worst colonials but not the best.
In the discussion of Federation which had a big influence on Australian thought it was the obvious success of the United States Federal Republic of the late nineteenth century. It is one of the American models seen by many Australians. More conservative thinking won, the ultimate structure of our government's parliamentary system, mainly copied British parliament in Westminster. Australia, however, does not have the House and the Senate as the House of Congress. The Senate was originally planned as a Parliament building and has a fixed number of senators elected from each province. The Senate was elected as a Parliament building, modeled on the American example. The role of the Australian Senate as the US House of Representatives, for the first seat of the Australian parliament, the senator from Western Australia, its glue representing its state today, the party's loyalty tends to win.
Since some Australian commentators are describing the Australian system as the 'Washminster' system, obviously we see the effects of both the United States and Britain

About eWorld

eWorld
Recommended Posts × +

0 comments:

Post a Comment