For the most part that is at the City level,although some counties have Mayors.
No at the local level there are city council, mayors, and county supervisors.
The mayor is head of city government. Some larger counties have mayors too. The mayor is the executive branch on the smallest level.
The same mayors that were mayors in Mississipi in the past.
Mayors are only at city-level, not state-level.
In the State of Ohio, Townships do not have mayors, rather they have a 3 member Board of Trustees who are elected officials. One board member acts as chairperson of the board. In Ohio mayors are usually on the level of village and/or municipal entities.
National Conference of Mayors
the gentlemen of England were sort of mayors of the settlement ,
a city mayors personnel file
Richard T. Middleton has written: 'Cities, mayors, and race relations' -- subject(s): Race relations, Political aspects, Case studies, Government policy, Municipal government, Mayors
Local government officials such as mayors, city council members, and county commissioners are typically responsible for governing at the local level. They are elected to represent the interests of the community and make decisions on issues that affect local residents.
Governors and mayors voted into office by the district.
The State of Illinois does not employ any mayors. "Mayor" is an executive office held within a city government. Not all cities have mayors, though. That depends on the organization of the city.