parliamentary government, a form of government where the executive power belongs to the prime minister or premier and his cabinet, where the executive and bodies are formed together, while the presidential government in which the executive power which is exercised by a single president elected by popular vote is independent of the legislative body.
classification by how power is distributed
classification by how power is distributed
In a presidential government, the president is both chief executive and head of state.
In parliamentary system the Prime Minister is the real head but in Presidential form of government the President is the real head.
In a presidential government, the president is both chief executive and head of state.
what best describes the relationship between the executive and legislative branches of the presidential government
what best describes the relationship between the executive and legislative branches of the presidential government
They both are a type of democracy.The people also elect their government leaders
classification by how power is distributed
A: They both are a type of democracy. The people also elect their government leaders, and a presidential democracy is ruled by a president and a parliamentary democracy is ruled by a prime minister. -BrockChloe
Parliamentary is the British political system. Presidential is the American political system.
The chief differences between parliamentary and presidential governance are procedural and ceremonial. In parliamentary systems the electorate selects parties, which in-turn chose the sitting ministers of parliament (MPs).The Prime Minister is by fact an MP, unlike an American system president wholly separate from the Congress and Senate. In the parliamentary system the Prime Minister is equivalent to the American president as chief executive. Moreover the president in a parliamentary system is largely ceremonial symbolic position.