Virtual ghost
Complex paradigm
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2008
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- 22,145
Do you mean third in protocol or third in actual power? I am asking because in Germany the rank in official protocol is:The position of the president is only the third most powerful behind Prime minister and speaker of the parliament.
Do you mean third in protocol or third in actual power? I am asking because in Germany the rank in official protocol is:
- Federal President
- President of the Bundestag (1. chamber)
- Chancelor
- President of the Bundesrat (2. chamber)
But out of these people the chancelor obviously has the most power in everyday politics. The president is mostly ceremonial and only becomes important in times of crisis as he or she can dissolve parliament and call for new elections after three failed attempts of electing a chancelor in the Bundestag or after the chancelor loses a vote of confidence in the Bundestag. The president basically accepts decisions others make (and only very rarely uses their power to reject them).
On the other hand, even the chancelor can not really do much without a majority in the Bundestag so in the end our system is very much based on a broader consensus rather than power in the hands of any one person (lesson learned!). Compared to presidential democracies like the US our head of government actuallyhas relatively little power. The chancelor nominates the cabinet ministers (which have to be rubberstamped by the president) and has "Richtlinienkompetenz" (i.e. the right to decide on and responsibility for the overall political direction of things). However, each minister is responsible for his or her department, so in a coalition (and all governments of postwar Germany have been coalitions) the chancelor actually has limited control over the policies of those ministries that belong to a minister of another party (so the FDP minister of finance can make things difficult for the rest of the government and every single budgetary decision has to be fought over within the government itself).
You probably already know a lot of this but I am also writing for the benefit of anyone else seeing this.![]()
Rights groups slam Bulgaria for banning LGBTQ+ ‘propaganda’
When something passes in parliament with 2/3 support you can be sure that a decent chunk of mainstream also voted for this. Probably some of the left wing parties were also in the mix (in Europe not all left is liberal in nature).
The United States and foreign mediators are maintaining pressure on Iran to delay an attack targeting Israel by threatening Iran and highlighting reported ceasefire progress. Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Affairs Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al Thani highlighted progress in ceasefire-hostage negotiations during phone calls with acting Iranian Foreign Affairs Minister Ali Bagheri Kani following talks in Doha on August 15 and 16.[7] Al Thani warned Bagheri Kani of unspecified consequences if Iran attacked Israel during negotiations in retaliation for Israel killing Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran. An unspecified US official speaking to reporters stated that Iran could face “cataclysmic” consequences if it derailed negotiations by conducting a retaliatory strike on Israel.[8] US, Israeli, and Iranian officials cited by the New York Times on August 16 said that Iran is expected to delay its retaliatory strike during ceasefire negotiations.[9] US President Joe Biden reportedly views the deal as the “key. . . to preventing a regional war,” and he said that he “expects” that Iranian leaders will delay or indefinitely postpone a strike if a ceasefire agreement is reached.[10] It remains unclear if “hold off” means that Iranian leaders would decline to mount any retaliatory strike on Israel or just that Iran would delay its strike.