Politics of Sedunn (Pacifica)

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Politics of Sedunn
Sedunnejj salul
Polity typeUnitary parliamentary republic
ConstitutionBasic laws
Legislative branch
NameMannared
TypeUnicameral
Meeting placePeople's Hall
Presiding officerHevv Gjieramm, Speaker of the Parliament
Executive branch
Head of State and Government
TitleDellm ("king"/"queen")
CurrentlyVimmru II
AppointerSpeaker of the Parliament
Cabinet
NameGovernment of Sedunn
Current cabinetSecond Vimmru cabinet
LeaderKing/Queen
Deputy leaderMinister of Foreign Affairs
AppointerKing/Queen
HeadquartersGreater Palace
Ministriesxx
Judicial branch
NameJudicial system of Sedunn
CourtsCourts of Sedunn
Supreme Court
Chief judgeIlva Tripallu
SeatGrovne


History

main:political history of sedunn

Executive authority

Government

The Government of Sedunn (Sedunnic: Sedunnejj Dommasa) is the national cabinet and the supreme executive authority of Sedunn.

Organisation and formation of the government

The Government operates as a collegial body with collective responsibility and consists of the King/Queen - appointed and dismissed by the Speaker of the Parliament (following a vote in the Parliament) - and the ministers of the cabinet (Sedunnic: karelilkumiblē). The Cabinet is appointed and dismissed at the sole discretion of the King. The Government is responsible for its actions to the Parliament. Individual ministers are not directly responsible for the performance of the agencies within their portfolio. The director-generals and other heads of government agencies report directly to the Government as a whole; individual ministers cannot intervene in individual cases in matters that are handled by the individual agencies, unless otherwise specifically provided for in law.

Ministries

The ministries are relatively small and merely policy-making organizations, allowed to monitor the agencies and preparing decision and policy papers for the government as a collective body to decide upon. There are no fixed ministries according to law, rather, the incumbent King can chose which ministries to have, in reality however, many ministries are de facto permanent by tradition.

Current cabinet

Government offices

Government agencies

Legislative authority

Parliament

Law

Judicial authority

Elections

Parties

Self-governance

Provinces

Municipalities

Foreign policy

Participation in international organisations