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How Canada's Government Works: le Guide complet for le test de citoyenneté

Par Citizenship Test Editorial Team·9 min de lecture·Mis à jour 2026-05-15

Everything about Canadian government structure for the test de citoyenneté. Parliament, Prime Minister, Senate, House of Commons, federal vs provincial explained.

Government structure is the second most tested topic after history. You'll likely see 3–5 questions about how Canada governs itself.

Canada's Political System

Canada is three things at once:

  • Constitutional monarchy: The King (Charles III) is Head of State
  • Federal state: Power is shared between federal and provincial governments
  • Parliamentary democracy: Citizens elect representatives to Parliament
  • The Three Parts of Parliament

    Parliament is made up of:

  • The Sovereign (King Charles III, represented by the Governor General)
  • The Senate (upper house, appointed, up to 105 members)
  • The House of Commons (lower house, elected, 338 members)
  • Key Government Roles

    Governor General: The King's representative at the federal level. Performs ceremonial duties like granting Royal Assent to laws.

    Prime Minister: Head of Government. Leader of the party with the most seats in the House of Commons. Chooses the Cabinet.

    Cabinet Ministers: Lead government departments (Finance, Health, Defence, etc.). Chosen by the PM.

    Members of Parliament (MPs): Elected by citizens in 338 electoral districts (ridings).

    Senators: Appointed by the Governor General on the advice of the PM. Review and can amend legislation.

    Federal vs Provincial Responsibilities

    Federal government handles:

  • National defence and foreign affairs
  • Criminal law
  • Banking and currency
  • Immigration and citizenship
  • Indigenous affairs
  • Postal service
  • Provincial governments handle:

  • Education
  • Health care
  • Natural resources
  • Highways
  • Property and civil rights
  • Municipal institutions
  • Test Tips

  • Know the three parts of Parliament
  • Understand the difference between Head of State (King) and Head of Government (PM)
  • Be able to distinguish federal from provincial responsibilities
  • Know that senators are appointed, MPs are elected
  • Practice government questions with our chapter tests.

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