Parliamentary System has a Presiden/Monarch as a Head of State and a Prime Minister/chancellor as the Head of Government. The legislature may be dissolved for new elections most of the time it is the lower house.
In a Presidential systems the President is both the Head of State and Government. The terms of the President and Legislative branches are fixed so they can not be dissolve for new elections.
This is not complete list but you get the idea
The chief differences between parliamentary and presidential governance are procedural and ceremonial. In parliamentary systems the electorate selects parties, which in-turn chose the sitting ministers of parliament (MPs).The Prime Minister is by fact an MP, unlike an American system president wholly separate from the Congress and Senate. In the parliamentary system the Prime Minister is equivalent to the American president as chief executive. Moreover the president in a parliamentary system is largely ceremonial symbolic position.
The parliamentary gov is elected by the legistlature
The presidential gov is elelected by us.. (citizens)
presidential system of government is flexible while parliamentary is rigid
The presidential system of government is managed by president and parliamentary system of government is handled by prime minister of country
In a presidential government, the president is both chief executive and head of state.
In a presidential government, the president is both chief executive and head of state.
were not represented in the British Parliament
were not represented in the british parliament
were not represented in the british parliament
were not represented in the british parliament
were not represented in the British Parliament
Members of Parliament represent a riding in the federal government, while Members of Provincial Parliament represen a riding in the provincial government.
The main difference between parliament and presidential democracy lies in the separation of powers. In a parliamentary democracy, the executive branch is headed by a prime minister or chancellor who is elected by the parliament. The executive and legislative branches are closely interconnected, with the parliament holding considerable power. In a presidential democracy, there is a clear separation of powers between the executive (headed by a president) and legislative branches. The president is directly elected by the people and acts as the head of state and government, with significant powers independent of the legislature.
In a presidential democracy, the people directly (or indirectly, like in the US) elect their president or chief executive. The executive branch is separate from the legislative branch of government. In a parliamentary democracy, the people only elect the members of parliament, who then elect a prime minister to serve as the head of government, and members of the parliament are also in the executive sector of government (ie...ministers)
had direct representation through assemblies - apex
The government is the executive branch responsible for implementing laws and policies, while the Parliament is the legislative branch responsible for making laws. The government is formed by the political party or coalition that has the majority support in Parliament. Members of the government are typically drawn from the Parliament.