[1][2] It is most significant in the Westminster system where most bills are introduced by the government.
Usually, constitutional systems that forbid members of the government from simultaneously being members of the legislature, such as South Korea and the Netherlands, give the government the right to initiate bills in its own right to allow it to introduce government bills.
However, in the United States, the right to introduce bills is only given to members of Congress, who cannot simultaneously serve in the executive branch, and the government can only introduce bills "by proxy", via its congressional backers.
[3] In the UK, forthcoming government bills are often listed in the King's Speech, a speech from the throne which precedes each session of Parliament.
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