The Canadian Coat of Arms and motto is "A Mari Usque Ad Mare." This means:
From sea to sea.
From the ocean to the sea.
From the sea to the ends of the earth.
From the water to the earth.
From sea to sea.
From the ocean to the sea.
From the sea to the ends of the earth.
From the water to the earth.
Ontario.
Quebec.
Northwest Territories.
Manitoba.
April 1st, 1999
July 1st, 1867
June 24th, 1995
March 31st, 1949
National defence and foreign policy.
National defence and firefighting.
Citizenship and highways.
Recycling and education.
Freedom of conscience and religion, and Freedom of association.
Equality rights, and to care for Canada's heritage.
Basic freedoms, and obeying laws.
Aboriginal peoples' rights, and to volunteer.
Mobility rights, Multiculturalism, and Aboriginal Peoples' rights.
Freedom of speech, Right to own land, and Right to a fair trial.
Right to ski anywhere in Canada, Moving rights, and Right to public assembly.
Right to vote, Right to speak publicly, and Security rights.
Atlantic, Central, Prairie, West Coast and North
Midwest, North, South, East, Central
Maritimes, Ontario, Quebec, Prairies and British Columbia
West, Central, East, Prairies and Territories
Conservative (Harper), NDP (Mulcair), Liberal (Trudeau), Bloc Quebecois (Paillé), Green Party (May)
Conservative (Harper), Green (May), Liberal (Rae), Bloc Quebecois (Duceppe)
NDP (Layton), Green (May), Liberal (Rae), Bloc Quebecois (Paillé)
Liberal (Ignatieff), Conservative (Harper), NDP (Turmel), Green (May)
Right to challenge unlawful detention, vote, apply for a Canadian passport, enter and leave Canada freely.
Right to have a job, vote, drive, go to school.
Right to go to school, work, have a bank account, travel.
Right to travel, live anywhere, work anywhere, get married.
Central Canada.
Prairies.
Atlantic Canada.
Northern Canada.
The Quiet Revolution.
The West Movement.
The Revolution.
La Francophonie.
No but you may choose to discuss how you voted with others.
If the Lieutenant Governor asks, yes.
If your Member of Parliament asks, yes.
If your family would like to know how you voted, yes.
Yes, if you feel the need to.
No, police service and conduct is not open to discussion with Canadians.
Yes, you can question their service but not their conduct.
Yes, you can question their conduct but not their service.
96.
56.
1,024.
42.
The leader of the party with the most elected representatives becomes the Prime Minister.
The Queen appoints the Prime Minister.
The Governor General with the Senate appoint the Prime Minister
The MPs vote on the Prime Minister
The party with the most elected representatives becomes the party in power. The leader of this party becomes the Prime Minister.
The party with the most elected representatives becomes the party in power. The Queen chooses the Prime Minister from this party
The Governor General picks a party and a Prime Minister to run the government.
Each province elects one representative to form the government. The Queen then chooses the Prime Minister.
By the Prime Minister
By the Queen.
By the voters.
By other Cabinet Ministers.
Approval by a majority in the House of Commons and Senate and finally the Governor General.
The Lieutenant Governor must approve the bill.
The Queen must sign the bill.
Approval by the Members of the Legislative Assembly.
Senators are appointed by the Governor General on the advice of the Prime Minister.
By the Governor General of Canada.
By the Premiers of all provinces.
Appointed by the Queen.