Ok we have looked at our Prime Minister, our Deputy PM and our Governor General, so let’s move onto our state Premiers.
We have 6 states, and each state has their own premier. We also have two main territories the Northern Territory and Australia Capital Territory. The territories do not have Premiers but instead have Chief Ministers.
The Premier is the senior representative and spokesperson for the Government, is usually its predominant Parliamentary performer, and tends to set the overall tone and direction of the Government.
The chief minister of the Northern Territory is the head of government of the Northern Territory. The office is the equivalent of a state premier. When the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly was created in 1974, the head of government was officially known as majority leader.
In a 1998 referendum, the voters of the Northern Territory rejected a statehood proposal that would have given the territory three senators, rather than the twelve held by the other states, although the name “Northern Territory” would have been retained.
Our Premiers and Chief Ministers responsibilities include schools, hospitals, conservation and environment, roads, railways and public transport, public works, agriculture and fishing, industrial relations, community services, sport and recreation, consumer affairs, police, prisons, and emergency services.
Dearest Jo-Anne,
That would be our US Governors, for each State.
It is a good system!
Hugs,
Mariette
Dearest Jo-Anne,
That would be our US Governors, for each State.
It is a good system!
Hugs,
Mariette
It is far better then some other countries, not ask me what countries I don’t know but I am sure there are other countries not ran as well
Oh, there are many that can’t even compare!
Thank you for explaining all that. Although I have visited Oz many times I had no real understanding of the government structure. Although, getting stuck down there, for 7 months 2019/2020, due to Covid, did bring into sharp relief the sometimes abrasive interaction between the various state premiers. Especially amongst themselves, but also with the federal government. Herding cats springs to mind.
Herding cats sounds about right, they do like to fight like cats and dogs far too often but overall what we have works