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Canada vote determines who'll be prime minister
Canadians begin this week with elections to fill all 308 seats in the House of Commons. That main branch of Parliament in Ottawa, an Ontario city that is the national capital, later selects a prime minister to become the head of Canada’s government. That choice depends on which political party wins the most seats in Monday’s national balloting. This system of government, also used by England and now being introduced in Iraq, is called a parliamentary democracy. Canadian candidates from three main parties and several smaller ones are running in House districts known as ridings. Canada’s Parliament also has a national Senate with 105 appointed members. The timing of this election was determined by opposition parties, which last Nov. 28 passed a resolution of “no confidence” aimed at Prime Minister Paul Martin, leader of the Liberal Party and Canada’s top elected official since December 2003. Allegations of financial misdeeds by senior Liberal officials eroded public support for the party, giving rivals a chance to force Martin to schedule an early election.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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