They are similar because they both have a head of the government.
They are similar because they both have a head of the government.
There are different types of governments in Europe. Some are monarchies, constitutional monarchies, and republics.
They are similar because they both have a head of the government.
As is the case today, there were many different types of government in existence in the 1930s. Examples include democracies, republics, democratic republics, constitutional monarchies, traditional monarchies, and dictatorships.
Most West Indies states are constitutional monarchies, being a part of the Commonwealth. The remaining are republics.
bismillahi alrahman alrahim
After centuries of absolutism e.g., England and France became parliamentary (or constitutional ) monarchies.
The only country in Africa with a non-democratic form of government is Swaziland. All the other countries are either republics or constitutional monarchies, which are both democratic governments.
Their are Constitutional Republics (The US is one) and Monarchy Republics (The UK is one).
The underlying assumption of this question, which is that constitutional monarchies are considered democracies by dint of being constitutional monarchies, is false. "Constitutional Monarchy" simply means that the power of the monarch (king) is limited by a constitution. This constitution can be enforced by some kind of oligarchy, aristocracy, or the common gentry. If the constitution is enforced by an oligarchy or aristocracy, the resulting state is not a democracy, whereas if it is enforced by the common gentry, it is democratic.Now, since almost all current constitutional monarchies are of this latter variety (monarchies with a constitution enforced by common people), people generally drop the intermediate step of separating non-democratic constitutional monarchies from democratic constitutional monarchies and refer to constitutional monarchies as a form of democracy.
As of October 2023, there are 15 republics within the Commonwealth of Nations. These republics have chosen to be independent nations, often opting for a president as their head of state instead of recognizing the British monarch. The remaining members of the Commonwealth have varying forms of government, including constitutional monarchies.
Why are you asking dozens and dozens of questions about constitutional monarchies? And why ask a stupid question like this one? France and US both kicked their monarchies out and then wrote a constitution. There has not been a constitutional monarch in either country.