The President is the head of the executive branch of the government.
Branches of Government
That refers to the power in a government being held not by a single person or group, but by more than one - different branches of government. In modern democracies, there are often three branches of government - legislative, executive, and judicial.
The three main types of governments are democracy, where power is held by the people through voting; monarchy, where power is held by a king or queen; and dictatorship, where power is held by a single individual or a small group.
The seperation of powers means no one holds "too much power," It is divided into 3 branches; Legislative, Executive, and Judicial. Legislative branch makes the laws Executive branch carries out the laws and the Judicial branch interprets the laws.
It is the separation of the primary governing functions among three branches of government, becoming the legislative branch, the executive branch, and the judicial branch. This being so that no one group of government officials controlled all the governing functions.
A system of checks and ballances, Congress creates laws President can Veto Supreme Court can decide if it is or is not constitutional
The Chateau Clique.
The three branches of government are: legislative, executive, and judicial. Legislative: makes the laws Executive: carries out the laws Judicial: enforces the laws
Council-Manager
Judicail- decides if laws are fair Legislative- Makes laws Excutive- The president is the leader of this branch.
In USA executive ranks, a Group Vice President is at the same level as an Executive Vice President. A Group Vice President ranks above a Senior Vice President and a Vice President, and will typically have multiple Senior Vice Presidents and/or Vice Presidents reporting to them.
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