- In law,
countersignature refers to a
second signature onto a do****ent. For example, a
contract or
other official do****ent
signed by the representative...
- For this reason,
every official act done by the
monarch requires the
countersignature of the
prime minister or, when appropriate, the
president of the Congress...
- All acts of the
emperor except for
military directives required the
countersignature of the
chancellor (Article XVII). The
emperor was also responsible...
-
compared to
prime ministers in
other parliamentary democracies. His
countersignature is
required for all laws and
Cabinet orders.
While most
ministers in...
-
Provisional decrees could be
promulgated by the
Chief of
State with the
countersignatures of the
Prime Minister and the
relevant minister,
though any such laws...
- 05:30 on 6 September.
Later that day Kasa-Vubu
managed to
secure the
countersignatures to his
order of
Albert Delvaux,
Minister Resident in Belgium, and...
-
provides that
certain presidential actions require the
prime minister's
countersignature,
including in
appointing judges and amb****adors,
commanding the military...
-
parliamentary rule in
Norway in 1884. His acts are not
valid without the
countersignature of a
member of the
Council of
State (cabinet)–usually the
Prime Minister–and...
-
Sovereign states operating as
constitutional monarchies which impose countersignature requirements on
their monarchs are Belgium, Denmark, Jordan, Luxembourg...
- the
prime minister. However, any
action of the
monarch requires a
countersignature from a minister. It is also a
principle in
Danish constitutional literature...