A. President
B. Member of the House
C. Minister
D. None of the above
Related Mcqs:
- Who decides whether a Bill is a Money Bill or Non-Money Bill?
A. Chairman of House of Lords
B. Speaker of House of Commons
C. Speaker of House of Representatives
D. None of these - In the case of Constituent Assembly’s dissolution the Federal Court set the judgment of the Sind Court aside on the technical ground that the Act by virtue of which the Sind Court issued the verdict was ‘not yet a law’ because it had not received the assent of:
A. Federal Court
B. Prime Minister
C. Governor-General
D. Law Minister - In the Parliament, what is the meaning of the Government Bill?
A. Bill presented by Ruling Party member
B. Bill approved by the Government
C. Only the Prime Minister presents the Bill
D. A Bill introduced by any Minister in either of the Houses of the Parliament - Which was the important Bill the 1st Constituent Assembly passed?
A. Proda (Public-representative offices disqualification Act)
B. Representative Act
C. Objective Resolution Act
D. Presidential Act 1953 - The President of U.S.A. can keep a bill passed by the Congress with himself for a period of:
A. 10 days
B. 15 days
C. 20 days
D. 30 days - Name the Bill which was passed by the 1st Constituent Assembly?
A. EBDO
B. PRODA
C. One Unit
D. None of them - According to the Parliament Act of 1911, the House of Lords can delay Non-Money Bill sent up by the House of Commons for:
A. One year
B. Two years
C. Three years
D. Four years - According to the Parliament Act of 1949, the House of Lords can delay a Non-Money Bill for:
A. One year
B. Two years
C. Three years
D. Four years - According to the Parliament Act of 1949, the House of Lords can delay a Non-Money Bill for:
A. One year
B. Two years
C. Three years
D. Four years - The parliament of which country sits in the palace of Westminster – probably better known as the House of Parliament:
A. UK
B. USA
C. Germany
D. Japan