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View Poll Results: Ano ba angkop sa atin?

Voters
12. You may not vote on this poll
  • Fed/Parliamentary

    10 83.33%
  • Fed/Presidential

    1 8.33%
  • Dati na nating Presidential

    3 25.00%
Multiple Choice Poll.
Results 31 to 40 of 86

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  1. Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Posts
    1,343
    #1
    aywan ko kung mayroon nang thread na ganito
    but anyways, ano-ano ba ang mapala ng taong bayan sa any of them. anyway, sanay na tayo sa presidential

    ito sabi ng mga expeto sa ganito:
    A federal system shifts the balance toward the central government. The regions still have some independent authority, and they can pass many of their own laws and taxes; however, the federal government has a much greater role to play in regulating trade, commerce, labour/education/environmental laws, and the like. The federal government is rather more powerful than a confederal one. Still, the regions retain some control, and there are usually specific powers that the regions have, but the federal government does not. However, the federal constitution has final authority; states cannot act directly against the principles of the national government's policies on rights, etc.

    a parliamentary government fuses two branches of government, the executive (who executes, or carries out, the laws) and the legislature (which passes laws). In a presidential system like that of the USA, these powers are divided between a president and a congress. In a parliamentary system, the leader of the majority party in the parliament (the Prime Minister) leads both the parliament in its development of laws and the bureaucracy (government departments) that carry out these laws and enact policies to meet the standards the laws demand. Thus, the prime minister runs both the government agencies and the legislature (by being the leader of his party). In a parliamentary system, majority usually rules, so any party (or coalition of parties) that can come up with a majority of seats in the parliament can pick one of its legislators to be leader and prime minister, and then carry out its policies as it sees fit (while respecting the constitution and the will of the judiciary) until the next election (which can usually be held at variable intervals, unlike presidential systems, which have a set schedule).
    Last edited by dbuzz; August 14th, 2008 at 05:36 PM.

Federalism/Parliamentary or stick na lang sa Presidential form of gov't.