Section 4 of the Constitution of Australia

Section 4 of the Constitution of Australia formally established the vice-regal position of the Governor-General of Australia.This article related to Australian law is a stub.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
vice-regalGovernor-General of AustraliaAustliiConstitution of AustraliaParliamentChapter I of the Constitution of Australia: The LegislatureSection 51 of the Constitution of AustraliaHouse of RepresentativesSenate CabinetChapter II of the Constitution of Australia: The ExecutiveSection 61 of the Constitution of AustraliaMonarchyGovernor-General Federal Executive CouncilHigh CourtChapter III of the constitution of Australia: CourtsSection 75 of the Constitution of Australia Boilermakers' CaseInter-State CommissionAustralian Constitutional LawResponsible governmentSeparation of powersFederalismImplied freedom of political communicationImplied immunity of instrumentalities Reserve power (sovereign) Reserved State powersReferendum processSenate elections (1906)1st State debts (1910)2nd State debts (1928)Social services (1946)Aboriginals (1967)Casual vacancies (1977)Referendums (1977)Retirement of judges (1977)Statute of Westminster 1931Statute of Westminster Adoption Act 1942Australia Act 1986Australian Constitution (Public Record Copy) Act 1990Constitutional history of AustraliaThe DismissalConstitutional Conventions2017–18 Australian parliamentary eligibility crisisList of proposed states of AustraliaRepublicanism in AustraliaSeparatist movements within AustraliaI: The ParliamentII: The Executive GovernmentIII: The JudicatureIV: Finance and TradeV: The StatesVI: New StatesVII: MiscellaneousVIII: Alteration of the ConstitutionEnumerated legislative powers (Section 51)(i) Interstate trade and commerce(ii) Taxation(v) Post and telegraph (communication)(vi) Defence(xii) Currency(xx) Corporations(xxvi) Race(xxvii) Immigration(xxix) External affairs(xxx) Pacific islands(xxxi) Acquisition of property(xxxv) Conciliation and arbitration(xxxvii) Referral(xxxviii) Imperial