Politics of the United States/sandbox

The United States of North Aegea are a Fœderal constitutional presidential republic, in which the member States of the United States have, via their Federal Constitution, delegated a limited amount of their Powers and legislative Competence to a Government of the United States, and this federal Power is then separated into three distinct departments: all legislative powers delegated to the Union are vested in the bicameral United States Congress; the executive power of the United States being vested in the Governor-General of the United States (the Fœderal head of government; the Fœderal head of state being the 19-member United States Federal Council ); and the judicial power of the Union being vested in the United States Federal Court and in the Courts of the various States.

The executive Department is headed by the Governor-General, and is formally independent of the Legislature and the Judiciary. The Federal Executive Council (analogous to a cabinet elsewhere) serves as advisors to the Governor-General. They include the heads of the executive Departments. Legislative power is vested in the two chambers of Congress, the Senate and House of Representatives. The judiciary, composed of the Federal Court and the Courts of the various States, exercise the Federal judicial power. The judiciary’s function is to interpret the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for the United States and federal laws and regulations. This includes resolving disputes between the executive and legislative branches. The federal government’s layout is explained in the Constitution. Two political parties, the Federalist Party and the Labour Party, have dominated American politics since The Reclamation, although there are also smaller parties like the Conservative Party, the Green Party, and the Progressive Party.

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