Respuesta :

Our Government is formed from a democratically elected House of Representatives. The Government advises the Sovereign (our head of State). By convention, the Sovereign, the source of all executive legal authority in New Zealand, acts on the advice of the Government in all but the most exceptional circumstances. This system is known as a constitutional monarchy.

Our system is based on the principle that power is distributed across three branches of government — Parliament, the Executive, and the Judiciary. Parliament makes the law. The Executive (Ministers of the Crown also known as the Government) administers the law. The Judiciary interprets the law through the courts

New Zealand has a constitutional monarchy. Because New Zealand is a dominion, the monarch of the United Kingdom is the head of state. The monarch is represented in the New Zealand government by the governor general. The prime minister, the parliament, and the cabinet run the government, and the monarch is a symbolic leader today. There are three branches of government: legislative, judicial, and executive. New Zealand does not have a written constitution. Instead, English laws such as the Magna Carta and the writ of habeas corpus hold importance.