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Spains Government

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

SPAIN’S GOVERNMENT

BY: HARRISON D

QUESTION:

DESCRIBE BEING A GOOD CITIZEN OF THE UNITED STATES AND SPAIN RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES?
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A good citizen of the United States is to follow your right and responsibilities for example, paying your taxes, voting, going to school, following the laws, serving on a jury, volunteering, those are some responsibilities you have in the USA here are examples of your rights, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, the right to equal justice, the right to own private property, freedom to work and travel.

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A good citizen of Spain is to follow your rights and responsibilities for example, everyone has the right to live but in the United States we have the death penalty, people have the right to participate in public activities, the right of association is allowed, everyone has the right to education, right to petition, citizens have the right to defend Spain. Here are some rights in spain freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, freely communicate.

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QUESTION

How doES SPAINS governments in the world compare to our federal government?
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The United States Government is a democracy which means we have a president. The US has 3 branches of government Legislative, Executive, Judicial. The Legislative makes the laws. Executive carries out the laws. Judicial interprets laws.

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Spain government is a monarchy that means they have a king and a queen. The king's name is Felipe he his the 6th king of Spain. The queen of Spain name is Letizia. Once the king dies it passes down to his kids and when the kids die it keeps on passing down to the next generation. Spain also has a prime minister his name is Pedro Sanchez. Spain has a constitution it started in 1978.

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vocabulary

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Allegiance: Commitment or loyalty

Domestic: Something occurring in a pacific country not internal or foreign

Federal: Relating to another system of government

Delegate: A person that represents others

Constituency: Voters elect a representative to the legislative body

Consensus: A agreement

Republic: The people elect representatives

Liberty: To be free and not being held back

Rights: Acting in a certain way

Responsibilities: To do something that was given

Treaties: A agreement between countries

Ambassadors: A person that represents something pacific

Republic: The power is held by the people

Monarchy: King or queen rules the country

Dictatorship: One leader has all the control over the citizens

Democracy: Citizens have the power

Representative Democracy: Citizens elect people to represent their rights

Direct democracy: It has no representatives citizens are involved in the government

Nationalism: Independence for a country

Isolationism: Groups that have a interest

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