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native language (eg. Germany, Austria, Monaco, Italy, Israel, Russia, Spain, Scandinavian countries, Pakistan, Vatican City etc). Furthermore, English language convention in general is to refer to nearly all heads of govt as PM, regardless of the actual title in the native language, with a small number of exceptions (Germany & Austria - Chancellor, Monaco - Minister of State, Vatican City - Secretary of State). However, having two separate articles has shown itself to be problematic. For example, German chancellor - Angela Merkel is discussed and included in the 'Prime minister' article as a 'prime minister of
Germany' as opposed to Germany having no prime minister. Is she then a 'prime minister' or not? A further problem is which countries heads of government should be included as prime ministers in the 'Prime minister' article? The head of government of Pakistan has the official title of 'Grand Vizier', and is referred to as such in the Urdu language. However, in the English language his title is translated as the 'Prime Minister of Pakistan'. If we were to conclude that Merkel is chancellor and not prime minister of Germany, (as both the German and English languages would indicate) then what about the "Grand Vizier of Pakistan'? - according to his official title he is not the prime minister of Pakistan, but according to the English translation of his role, he is the prime minister of Pakistan.
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regardless of which party won the election, that she can appoint 120 ministers who normally serve
Parliament and answer when necessary to courts but when serving the Crown need not answer to the Parliament, which means, since courts are inferior to the Parliament, need not obey court orders (a real case to that effect arose not many years ago involving a refused asylum application), that she and not the Prime Minister is the commander-in-chief, that she determines who can receive a passport (presumably meaning she can set immigration and citizenship policies), that her legislative veto is final (making a Prime Minister's rejection of her advice potentially career-ending), and that she may have been within her rights when she responded to a disinclination by the appointive House of Lords to enact legislation she desired by suggesting that she could appoint many more members to that House unless the House passed the bill. Any requirement that the Queen accept the PM's advice on cabinet composition is political, not legal. While it is widely believed that the Queen is not supposed to have political opinions, or at least that they must be private or secret, neither is the law.
690:"State President" was the title of the head of state of the Republic of South Africa from 1961 to 1994 (Apartheid rule). From 1961 to 1984 the State President was the head of state with limited ceremonial powers, while the Prime Minister was the head of government. In 1984 the office of Prime Minister was merged with the office of State President, thus transferring the executive powers of the Prime Minister to the State President. So, State President was not the title of the head of government of South Africa.
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the Queen's long service as the head of state enables her to provide the prime minister with information and insight into many matters to better run the government. However, because the United
Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy, the Prime Minister uses his or her own discretion regarding whether or not to follow the Queen's advice. The Queen also is entitled to appoint a new Prime Minister."
1145:. But the second RfC doesn't talk about living people in general, just expanding the first RFCs consensus from "ethnic/"race" to also include "similarly large human populations". (I haven't read the Second RfC completely so it's possible I missed something.) And Head of government is clearly not in the same category as ethnic groups or similarly large human populations.
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the last 10 years, but of similar quality, and not simply a one-page nonscholarly brochure-like page. (That page reminds me of the big-city U.S. mayor who told a children's book author that he writes the laws, and I think several dozen City councilmembers would properly have disputed that.) In the meantime,
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The problem is the photos don't actually provide understanding on the topic. The article is on the topic of head of government as a role, putting some photos of some heads of government around the world doesn't actually add anything. It doesn't make it easier for the reader to understand just because
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The following, found in the lead, apparently not a summary of anything in the body, and unsourced, is partly wrong and partly misleading: "For example, in the United
Kingdom, the prime minister 'advises' the Queen on the appointment of the cabinet, advice she is required to accept. On the other hand,
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In a presidential system of government, both the head of state and the head of government is the
President. So, the President's role as head of state is more important than that as head of government. But in semi-presidential and parliamentary systems, the head of state and the head of government is
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should be just a click away and might be of interest. Now, if the legal book is wrong, and that's possible with any source, you may refute it, but the page you linked to is merely a sketchy disagreement and not adequate as a thoughtful refutation of a law textbook by a well-credentialled author and
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Many countries have a singular head of government and head of state, or a Prime
Minister who does not wield the power of head of government. We need to keep historical Prime Ministers from countries which have abolished that position and replaced it with something else. Agreed that Chief Ministers,
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of Univ. of
Glasgow (N.Y.: Oxford Univ. Press (Clarendon Law ser.), 2003). I'd recommend that you read it except that, while I read it 4–5 years after publication, it is now 14 years after publication and apparently no newer edition has been issued, and so I suggest reading a book published within
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but only using humor, which I could match. Seriously, I think you are confusing political and legal. The page you linked to does not significantly separate the two. I did, and said so in the opening post of this topic. If you search the page you linked to for "Crown" or "Queen" (without quotation
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An
English law textbook written for undergraduates and published by Oxford University Press (I cited it for another article some years ago), said that the government has two branches, Crown and Parliament, that the Queen is the head of state, that she can appoint anyone or no one as Prime Minister
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Having two separate articles for this position, is duplication. The discussion of prime minister, is essentially about the role of the head of government, and the two are pretty much interchangable. Of course there are some countries whose head of government is not titled 'Prime minister' in their
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I've rewritten bits to stress where I am talking about a parliamentary system-prime minister. I think there may be more clarity. I've bullet-pointed your opening paragraph to highlight the three distinctions; presidential, semi-presidential and parliamentary. When I get the chance I'll add in more
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We will have to simply dissagree on that point as the link you provided says "Using photomontages or a gallery of images of group members should be avoided in articles about ethnic groups or similarly large human populations." This article is about a position...not people....the article to spam
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The
British monarch is the head of state and the nominal head of the executive, but is not the head of government. The head of government is the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, who is a member of the House of Commons elected by the people of the United Kingdom. Even in the Netherlands, the
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Sort of borderline, assuming the montage is restricted to currently serving, there may be 300 or so, maybe less. Still plenty for potential disagreement/disruption, but that may be preventable with decent consensus, maybe via rfc. If there is too much disruption/timesink on this, I say remove.
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Terminology is tough, I know, but is the Head of
Government really necessarily the chief officer of the executive branch, as it says in the first sentence? In semi-presidential systems and many parliamentary systems, the chief executive office sits above the Government (or "Administration", in
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Why would you not consider this a large human group..... there's hundreds of them. Regardless I seen by the edit wars and all the posts above its clearly a point of contention and won't ever be stable. Perhaps a RFC so others can evaluate the wording that is clear to me.
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Agree with above it's pretty random. There aren't really any images in the article that help understand the topic. (Not that the article is great either.) Perhaps just sticking to the politics sidebar is more helpful, at least that one gives related links.
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I therefore suggest one article on Heads of government, in which the position is defind. It will be mentioned within the article that the most common title for head of government is 'prime minister' as well as which other titles are used to describe this
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Hey, can someone add Joe Biden, the President of the United States of America and Chris Hipkins, the Prime Minister of New Zealand (my country) to the list of heads of government at the top of the page, or are the 9 already there enough? thx.
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marks), you'll notice how little those words are used, whereas U.K. law gives much more weight to the Crown, an office occupied at the top by the Queen, who, legally, is not to be trifled with. I dug out the book citation I referred to above:
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there's the photo of the prime minister of Japan at the top of the article. None of these people are mentioned in the article, so it's just really decoration and the selection may as well be random. Seems like it maybe doesn't even pass
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Yeah. I find it hard to make "about ethnic groups or similarly large human populations" fit well here. I commented, a little, in the discussions that led to MOS:NOETHNICGALLERIES, and I supported it for the timesink/disruption aspects.
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By George! You live in Fantasyland. Well, it's Saturday night: maybe you high on pot..Once you're back on Planet Earth, read this British government short information page on who's the boss in the British system of government:
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I think it has to do with the inherent problems not just the scale..... it's the spirit of the protocol we should be following not finding ways to run around it. But clearly we need to make the wording clear for all.
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Head of Government or Prime Minister may be 3rd, 4th or even more on a country's precedence table. A Head of Government is the highest political official, who leads a country regarding its national policies.
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for that. Biden might not be the best choice because he is not only head of government, but also head of state. I don't have such an objection to adding Hipkins, though, if others think that it's necessary.
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The Head of Government talks about the other positions besides Prime Minister as mentioned in the header. There was no merged for the other pages for the different heads of government. I oppose the merge.
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head of government, that requires clarifying how such a system within which a separate head of government operates, actually works. So I think this is one of the instances were duplication is necessary.
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specifically says "Articles about ethnic groups or similarly large human populations" this one is neither so it shouldn't apply. I don't really care if there are images at the top or which ones, but
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The Prime Minister of the UK is crucial to this article because it is the first of office of the head of government. Due to the presence of this role, the head of government was created.
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I'm not sure I agree with this. The images show who is actually meant by head of government without having to start reading, so they do provide a basic understanding of the topic.
970:. Will lead to endless edits and talks over who, what race, gender etc...to represent....simply for visuals appeal as links to bios dont help in understanding the topics at hand
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I'm going to put the bit back for that reason. I will be revisiting the article later and I may rephrase or re-contextualise the above. I certainly take your point seriously.
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Because ethnic groups apply to millions, similarly large human populations could then be interpreted to also mean millions. The second RfCs Close also specifically mentions
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In more than six months there has been very little discussion of this merger proposal, and there is clearly no consensus for the merge, so I am removing the tag.
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President of France is also head of government, since he chairs cabinet meeting, is this correct ? our prime minister is our head of government. jeffy is funny
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Should British monarch be counted as head of government alongside Prime Minister as well ? By constitutional convention, monarch is head of Parliament
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Agree with Canterbury Tail: it's effectively a random selection of leaders, and does not contribute significantly to an understanding of the topic.
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I found the following sub-literate drivel at the end of the second paragraph but it doesn't show up on the edit page so I don't know how to fix it.
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One is a head of government in general, and one is specifically a prime minister. I don't know why this was even proposed in the first place.
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article, which I have contributed to, may serve as inspiration and many sources used over there could also be used in this article as well.
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not including a lead image in this article. Readers do not need a montage of random heads of government to help them understand the topic.
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Also for King of Netherlands is similar, since Dutch constitution specifies that government is consisted of Crown(king) and his ministers
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article. The PM article should only deal with the etymology of that expression, and links to offices which use that particular title. The
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There is no need to add more images. The current collage reflects the plurality of governmental systems, racial and gender plurality.
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shouldn't apply here. Also your edit summary looks really unhelpful to the point that calling it disingenuous might be more accurate.
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American terms). The person who heads the Government is not necessarily the head of the entire executive branch of government.
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1099:. Not sure how a list of only thoses from democracies helps in any manner...only democracies have heads of governments?
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answerability for its actions to whichever house (almost invariably the democratically elected upper house) controls
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This is the type of article the closes talked about "concerning galleries of images of living people in general,"
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I cleaned up the spelling and punctuation of this article, and took out the misunderstanding about 10 Downing St.
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The formation of a government answerable to parliament by a member (sometimes the leader) of the party or parties;
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always be the de facto political leader.' at Under a dominant head of state. Should there only be one not here?
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I agree that all substantive and generic Head of Government related information should be moved here from the
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At a glance, the current selection seems pretty decent, arguably it covers South America and Oceania.
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which again are millions. Head of government is what? A few hundred? Clearly a different scale.
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This was expanded into a second RfC concerning galleries of images of living people in general
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separated. So, a President is not specifically introduced as a head of government.
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You can see the reason for deletion at the file description page linked above. —
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Local consensus not to have a leadimage in this article is certainly possible.
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should be moved, but positions like Premier and Chancellor are not as clear.
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This really ought to gonto an article on parliamentary systems of government
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I agree it should be in such an article, but because we are talking about a
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Anwar Ibrahim, official portrait 2022 (cropped, 3to4 format, closeup).jpg
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State President of South Africa was Head of State, NOT Head of Government
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from a highly reputable publisher. You're welcome to go at it.
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Full answerability of that government to parliament through
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Rishi Sunak , Prime Minister Official Portrait 2022.jpg
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Both are equally important, should never be merged.
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1078:WP:LEADIMAGE
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164:— Preceding
161:
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40:WikiProjects
924:Sup3rG33k08
908:Sup3rG33k08
888:Sup3rG33k08
873:Sup3rG33k08
486:Ithinkicahn
298:—Preceding
30:Start-class
1360:Categories
1344:Wikifan153
1241:Nikkimaria
934:Thriftycat
583:Public Law
574:good faith
507:Travelmite
500:Definition
557:Lubiesque
360:Mrodowicz
343:Mrodowicz
256:Vandalism
170:Nurusa101
1182:Amputees
1178:Children
944:_-_Alsor
456:Keivan.f
222:separate
178:contribs
166:unsigned
112:Politics
103:politics
59:Politics
1312:support
1264:GoodDay
468:Neutron
300:undated
248:Guinnog
158:comment
139:on the
1316:Cjhard
1262:page.
1187:Nobody
1148:Nobody
1061:Nobody
993:Nobody
482:Oppose
450:Oppose
429:Oppose
421:Rtkat3
417:Rtkat3
383:RicJac
311:@Siyac
212:Supply
205:Supply
36:scale.
358:role.
295:Siyac
1348:talk
1320:talk
1298:talk
1284:talk
1268:talk
1245:talk
1206:Moxy
1193:talk
1180:and
1167:Moxy
1154:talk
1132:Moxy
1128:here
1118:talk
1102:Moxy
1086:talk
1067:talk
1050:talk
1029:talk
1015:talk
999:talk
973:Moxy
968:here
948:talk
912:talk
895:talk
877:talk
857:talk
824:talk
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729:talk
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611:diff
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472:talk
404:talk
387:talk
364:talk
347:talk
320:talk
275:talk
174:talk
1340:not
1336:not
1280:CMD
1209:🍁
1170:🍁
1135:🍁
1105:🍁
976:🍁
851:. —
818:. —
785:. —
723:. —
651:. —
440:zan
435:Fai
238:JTD
230:JTD
131:Top
1362::
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42::
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