the question doesn't make sense
the question doesn't make sense
confederate
Switzerland is an example of a country that has a confederation system of government, with power shared between the central government and its cantonal governments.
In a confederate system (as in the Articles of Confederation), the states retain most of the governmental power.
In a confederate system (as in the Articles of Confederation), the states retain most of the governmental power.
oligarchy
Under a confederate system of government much of the power is located in the individual states. The lack of a strong system of central government caused the Articles of Confederation for fail in the United States.
The answer is Unitary government
There is no confederation. It was discarded in 1787.
The Articles of Confederation, our system of government prior to the adoption of the U.S. Constitution, created a confederation of states. A confederation is a political system with a loose association of states in which the regional governmnents (the states) retain the ultimate power except for the powers that the states give to the national government. The United States operated as a confederation from 1776 to 1787. The Articles also created a uni-cameral legislature with no executive branch and no national judicial system of courts. MrV
Federation. Or Confederation.
the most popular system of government is the unity system, in which there is no regional representation just a national government (like in a federal system), and the national government holds most of the power