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  1. Mar 31, 2010 · To some Canadians, the economic integration with the United States symbolized by the DPSA prevented Canada from pursuing an independent foreign policy. That there was economic integration seemed undeniable.

  2. One remarkable truth of the Canadian and United States federalisms is that each country has departed from the original understanding of the distribution of federal power as expressed in the Constitution.

    • Martha A. Field
    • 1992
  3. The United States and Canada, bordering countries with a shared history of British rule, are both democracies, but each uses distinct methods of government. Canada, for example, is a constitutional monarchy governed by a prime minister and a parliament.

  4. Mar 9, 2009 · In Canada, it is known as the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). Trump’s presidency forced the Canadian government, particularly Prime Minister Trudeau, to practice some delicate diplomacy. On the one hand, the prime minister had to avoid offending the notoriously thin-skinned president.

  5. Apr 5, 2010 · It often seems in Canada that the federalism debate—who does what, who should do what, competition for turf and public support—trumps substantive policy debate, while in the United States, policy trumps federalism—but again perhaps not always.

    • Richard Simeon, Beryl A. Radin
    • 2010
  6. The Constitution of Canada is the country’s governing legal framework. It defines the powers of the executive branches of government and of the legislatures at both the federal and provincial levels. Canada’s Constitution is not one legal document.

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  8. Canada repatriated its constitution from the UK in 1982, severing a final colonial tie. Economically and technologically, the nation has developed in parallel with the US, its neighbor to the south across the world's longest international border.