In the US, the President heads the Executive Branch.
They are both part of the U.S. government. The president is head of the executive branch while Congress makes up the legislative branch.
That would be the Executive Branch, whose head is the President.
President Obama is in the Executive Branch of the government. (Congress is the Legislative Branch, and the Supreme Court is called the Judicial Branch.)
The head of the executive branch can veto laws passed by congress. The head of the executive branch is the president.
The head executive of a state government is called a governor.
The Governor is the head executive in state government.
The head executive of a state government is called the Governor.
The head executive of the US government is the President, Barack Obama.
The President of the United States is the head of the Executive Branch.
The head executive of the US government is the President, Barack Obama.
No. State governments in the U.S. are usually similar to the Federal Government. This means that most states have three branches of government. The Governor is the head of a state's executive branch, just as the President is head of the United States' executive branch. This means that they are both separate from the national or state congress, which are part of the legislative branch.
Article 1 of the US Constitution defines the President as the executive branch. It also gives the President the power to veto bills by Congress.