Always the King of Prussia
Could appoint and dismiss the Chancellor
Could dissolve the Reichstag
Controlled Foreign Policy
Could make treaties and Alliances
Commanded the army
Could declare war and make peace
Supervised the execution of all federal laws
Possessed the right to interpret the constitution
Pie de foto: : William the 1st with Bismarck and his subjects
Diapositiva 3
Chancellor
Chief Minister of the Reich
Not responsible to Reichstag, only the emperor
Decided upon Reich policy outlines
Chaired sessions of the Bundesrat
Could hire and fire state secretaries responsible for the various government ministries
Could ignore resolutions passed by the Reichstag
Office was normally combined with the Minister-Presidency of Prussia
Centralised government with specific responsibilities for the Reich as a whole.
These could include:
Foreign affairs
Defence
civil and criminal law
customs
railways
postal service
Regional government with specific responsibilities for individual states.
Roles could include:
education
transport
direct taxation
police
local justice
health
The federal council
Comprised 58 members nominated by state assemblies
Consent was required in the passing of new laws
Theoretically able to change the constitution
A vote of 14 against a proposal constituted a veto
Prussia had 17 of the 58 seats
Bavaria had 6 seats and the smaller states one each
Potentially extensive power
The national Parliament
Elected by all males over 25 years of age
Accept or reject legislations
State secretaries were excluded from membership of the Reichstag and not responsible to it
Members were not paid
Could approve or reject the budget
Elected every 5 years (unless dissolved)