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Page "Governor-General of Australia" ¶ 32
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she and appoints
He or she also appoints city board members.
As the sovereign is shared equally with 15 other independent countries in a form of personal union, as well as with the ten other jurisdictions of Canada, and resides predominantly in her oldest realm, the United Kingdom, she, on the advice of her Canadian prime minister only, appoints the governor general to carry out most of her constitutional and ceremonial duties for an unfixed period of time — known as serving at Her Majesty's pleasure — though five years is the normal convention.
To assist the Queen in carrying out her official duties on behalf of Canada, she appoints various people to her Canadian household.
The president proposes an individual as Federal Chancellor and then, provided he or she is subsequently elected by the Bundestag, appoints him or her to the office.
" In practice, the sovereign very rarely exercises this power ; since the monarch does not normally reside in Barbados, she appoints a governor-general to represent her and any exercise of powers are largely carried out through this representative.
Queen Elizabeth II is head of state and is represented in Bermuda by a Governor, whom she appoints.
Elected to a term of three years and limited to three consecutive terms, he or she appoints the directors of each provincial department which include the office of administration, engineering office, information office, legal office, and treasury office.
The lord-lieutenant is supported by a vice lord-lieutenant and deputy lieutenants that he or she appoints.
The President's power to appoint officials has been reduced, but he or she still appoints all military officers as well as judges.
The president entrusts his authority in Ministers, whom he or she appoints.
He or she effectively controls the Executive branch, represents the country abroad, and appoints the Cabinet and, with the approval of the Senate, the judges for the Supreme Federal Tribunal.
He or she is charged with directing city departments and agencies, and with the advice and consent of the Chicago City Council, appoints department and agency leaders.
He or she additionally appoints members to the boards of several special purpose municipalities including the Chicago Park District, Chicago Public Library, Chicago Housing Authority, Chicago Transit Authority, the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority, et al.
He or she chairs the House of Commons Commission, a body that appoints staff, determines their salaries, and supervises the general administration of those who serve the House.
As Her Majesty the Queen cannot reside in all of her realms she appoints representatives to carry-out her duties as Queen of the Bahamas.
However, when she questions his plan to take the ship to the edge of the world, he pushes her over the side and appoints the Wizard captain.
Bradford, the pragmatist, clashes with Milford, the idealist ; Bradford's wife is Milford's ex-girlfriend, who finds she still has feelings for Milford upon his release from the prison camp ; Denisov appoints Milford's ex-wife, a powerful magistrate ( and General Samanov's mistress ), to serve as Bradford's deputy and assistant in Heartland ; and Kimberly's renewed sense of American pride ultimately affects her relationship with Denisov.
The appointment powers of the governor are extensive, as he or she appoints almost all military and civil officers of the State subject to the advice and consent of the Senate.
In religious institutes whether of men or of women, he or she appoints the regular confessors, calls together the Provincial Chapter, presides over its deliberations, and takes care that the orders of the General Chapter and the Superior General are properly carried out.
He ( or she ) appoints a number of vice-presidents ordered numerically according to rank and responsible for their respective major ministries such as Finance, Foreign affairs, Domestic administration and so on.
Samantha ( Carina Lau ), who is managing the Hong Kong subsidiary of the company, is the project leader of this assignment and she appoints two zany but highly creative designers to aid her in that project, Wayne ( Louis Koo ) and Johnny ( Sean Lau ).
He ( or she ) appoints the Chief of the Chambers ( of the Sejm, and of the Senat ), and since 1989 substitutes for the President of Poland in the event of that office's vacancy.
After the end of the Red Ship War, she brings Chade Fallstar out from the shadows and appoints him as her adviser and councillor.
When Davy Jones attacks Feng's ship, the mortally wounded Feng appoints Elizabeth his successor, then she and the crew are imprisoned in the Flying Dutchmans brig.

she and deputy
The heir to the grand duke of Luxembourg may be titled prince-lieutenant (' prince deputy ') during a period in which the incumbent remains formally on the grand ducal throne, but ( progressively, most ) functions of the crown are performed by the ' monarch apprentice ', as prince Jean ( still alive ) did 4 May 1961-12 November 1964 in the last years of his mother Charlotte's reign ( she lived until 1985 ), and Jean's own son prince Henri 3 March 1998-7 October 2000 until his father abdicated and he succeeded.
In 1966 she was appointed deputy director of the Central Cultural Revolution Group and claimed real power over Chinese politics for the first time.
Backed by her husband, she was appointed deputy director of the so-called Central Cultural Revolution Group in 1966 and emerged as a serious political figure in the summer of that year.
While in the Bastille, de Launay fell in love with a fellow prisoner, the Chevalier de Ménil ; she also infamously received an invitation of marriage from the Chevalier de Maisonrouge, the governor's deputy, who had fallen in love with her himself.
Julie A. MacDonald, deputy assistant secretary at the Interior Department appointed by Norton in 2002, also resigned after an internal review found that she had violated federal rules by giving government documents to lobbyists for industry.
From 1989 to 1990, she was also deputy chairperson of the Green Group in the European Parliament.
During this second term as an MEP, she was again a member of the Committee on Civic Liberties and Internal Affairs, the Sub-Committee on Human Rights and the EC-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee, of which she was elected deputy chairperson.
The widow of William P. " Will " Fletcher ( 1917 – 1999 ), a retired United States Army colonel and a former Grant Parish deputy sheriff, she was survived by a daughter, Janet F. Dyson of Baton Rouge, two grandsons, three great-grandchildren, and her brother, Maurice Smith, a former Montgomery High School principal and Grant Parish school superintendent.
At some point after that, Shawn Bell, Wayne's deputy fire marshal, said that workers found the body of a woman in the rubble, and that she was a clerical worker for the store in her 50s, who was also from Westland.
In 1983, Dunwoody stood for election as deputy leader of the Labour Party, alongside Peter Shore, on a Eurosceptic platform ( a position she consistently maintained throughout her career-she voted against the Maastricht Treaty seven times ).
As the party's first MP, she became Reform's deputy leader, a position she held for the remainder of the party's history.
This brought her to the attention of David Garrick, who sent his deputy to see her as Calista in Nicholas Rowe's Fair Penitent, the result being that she was engaged to appear at Drury Lane.
Later she joined the ANC Women's League and was elected deputy president, and in 1994 she became a member of Parliament before retiring in 1998.
Out of Parliament, and now Margaret Beckett, she was elected to Labour's National Executive Committee in 1980, and supported left-winger Tony Benn in the 1981 Labour deputy leadership election won by Denis Healey.
Amos was born in British Guiana ( now Guyana ) in South America, and attended Bexley Technical High School for Girls ( now Townley Grammar School for Girls ), Townley Road, Bexleyheath, where she was the first black deputy Head Girl.
Greene was out of the country at the time, so she accepted an invitation to meet Harman Grisewood, his deputy, a Roman Catholic who she felt listened to her with understanding, but over the next few months continued to be dissatisfied with what she saw on television.
One deputy prime minister, Sheila Copps, attracted controversy in 1993 after asserting that she was " in charge " of government business while the then Prime Minister, Jean Chrétien, was out of the country.
After she left politics, she wrote that although the position of deputy prime minister is only ceremonial, " very often, the DPM's job was to protect the prime minister from the political damage that Question Period can inflict on a leader ," further citing the experience of Erik Nielsen during the Sinclair Stevens scandal.

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