Canada

The, commonly known as , are a Fœderal supranational union consisting of fifteen self-governing commonwealths that have pooled their sovereignty for specific and express purposes, and to that end they have delegated a very small range of their sovereign Powers to a Federal head, consisting of a Federal Congress, a General Government, and a Federal Court; and the several Commonwealths, through these institutions, are directly responsible for the government of the Canadian Fœdus (e.g., the Canadian Fœderal Union). All Powers not expressly and deliberately delegated to the Federal head by the Commonwealths are reserved, exclusively and perpetually, to the Commonwealths respectively or to the people thereof: "[E]ach Commonwealth fully retains to itself its Independence, Sovereignty, and all Powers, Rights, Authorities, and Jurisdictions which have not been by [this] Confederation expressly and deliberately delegated [to the Federal head]"; the Federal head is not Sovereign, but the Commonwealths have delegated to their Federal head the authority to exercise some of their sovereign Powers on their behalf, but only on a limited number of Matters that are expressly enumerated and defined in the Federal Constitution.

Canada composes the northernmost region of both North Aegea and the wider Aegean supercontinent. The United Commonwealths of Canada are bordered to the south by the United States (from west to east: the States of Washington, Idaho, Montana, and North Dakota), the Federated States (from west to east: the States of Minnesota, Mackinac, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Ohio), New England (from west to east: the States of Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine); to the east by the Nordic Commonwealth (Greenland); and to the west by the Russian Democratic Federative Republic (from west to east: the Republics of Kamchatka, and Chukotka).

Etymology
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History
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Geography
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Politics and government
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Law
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Politics
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Elections
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Political culture
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General-Commonwealth relations
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Federal Legislature
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Senate of Canada
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House of Commons
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Federal Executive
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Governor-General
The Governor-General of Canada is elected by the Governors of the fifteen Commonwealths of Canada. The Governor-General is also responsible to his Commonwealth counterparts, whereby the Governor-General and his government resign if the Governors of at least three-fifths of the Commonwealths vote no confidence in him or his government (in such an event where the Governor-General loses the confidence of the Commonwealth Governors, he and his government serve in a caretaker function until his replacement is chosen and thereafter installed).

Executive Council
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Federal Courts
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Canadian Commonwealths
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Foreign affairs
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International organizations
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Emergency and military affairs
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Military
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Emergency management
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Crime and law enforcement
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Economy
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Demographics
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Language
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Culture
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