Most democracies outside the US have a prime minister and parliament instead of a president and two houses of congress. Some countries have both a president and prime minister.
Most democracies outside the US have parliamentary systems, where the executive branch is led by a prime minister who is chosen by the legislature. They also tend to have proportional representation electoral systems, where seats in the legislature are allocated based on the proportion of votes a party receives. Additionally, many democracies outside the US have multi-party systems, allowing for a greater diversity of political parties and views.
Besides the US, The United Kingdom, France, Germany, Sweden, the Netherlands, Mexico, Canada, and many other countries are representative democracies.
Because the U.S. supports all democracies. Furthermore, outside of Israel, the U.S. has the largest Jewish population in the world.
Yes, but only formal democracies.
A common definition of βrepublicβ is, to quote the American Heritage Dictionary, βA political order in which the supreme power lies in a body of citizens who are entitled to vote for officers and representatives responsible to themβ
Both are democracies.
Democracies.
the law.
They are both democracies.
multiparty
Low
Most Powerful,
In North America, Canada and its Provinces are parliamentary democracies.