the citizens of the country.
A quasi-presidential system is a political system where the roles of the president and prime minister are combined or blurred. This can create a power-sharing arrangement or division of responsibilities between the two offices. It is a hybrid model that includes elements of both presidential and parliamentary systems.
That's easy! - most British Citizens are eligible to vote in Parliamentary elections, once they are 18. The Political Party that wins the most seats in Parliament will form a Government. The leader of the largest Parliamentary Party (and therefore the leader of the governing Party) becomes PM and head of the Government.
the people if its a democratic country
me
Parliamentary democracy is the type of democracy where the legislature, typically the parliament, elects the prime minister. The prime minister is the head of government and is accountable to the parliament.
parliamentary
A parliamentary system. Elected representatives in a parliamentary system vote for a leader, such as a prime minister, among themselves. The leader is typically the head of the majority party or coalition in the legislature.
It is a parliamentary democracy.
America has a presidential system and Canada has parliamentary government system. America elects their president, while in Canada the Prime Minister leads the party that receives the most votes.
In a parliamentary system voters elect the members of parliament but they do not elect the leader/prime minister. The members of parliament elect the leader.
Mongolia is a parliamentary republic, parliament is elected by the people and in turn elects the government.
In a parliamentary system, the Prime Minister is asked to form a government by the head of state (President or constitutional monarch) normally based on the results of the parliamentary election. The political parties normally try to avoid the head of states embarrassment by agreeing in advance which party or coalition should form the government.