Typically, dissolving parliament doesn’t refer to the abolition of the institution, but an end to the current electoral mandate and a call for new elections. It happens in most parliamentary systems when an impasse is reached, unlike the US where we repeatedly shut down the government, furlough hundreds of thousands of state employees, and jack off for a year and a half until the next scheduled federal election.
Typically, dissolving parliament doesn’t refer to the abolition of the institution, but an end to the current electoral mandate and a call for new elections. It happens in most parliamentary systems when an impasse is reached, unlike the US where we repeatedly shut down the government, furlough hundreds of thousands of state employees, and jack off for a year and a half until the next scheduled federal election.