A presidential system is a system of government where an executive branch exists and presides (hence the name) separately from the legislature, to which it is not responsible and which cannot, in normal circumstances, dismiss it.
A parliamentary system is a system of government in which the ministers of the executive branch get their democratic legitimacy from the legislature and are accountable to that body, such that the executive and legislative branches are intertwined.
For the most part, the US practices the presidential system although the legislature can impeach members of the executive brand and approve - or disapprove - appointments made by the executive branch.
No, the United States is a representative republic.
They have a presidential political system and free market economical system.
no,with analysis to my own veiw as a political thinker i think us is
Federal System and Presidential Democracy
Federal System and Presidential Democracy
The Electoral college is the Presidential voting system. The electoral college gives each state a certain amount of electoral votes. If a presidential candidate wins the majority of the citizens votes, he will also get the electoral vote.
In the US presidential election of 1848, Zachary Taylor of the Whig Party won the election. Even though he was a slave owner himself, he did not want to expand the practice further into the West.
Kenya is a democracy whith a Presidential system, more or less comparable to the US system.
The writers of the US Constitution put into practice the idea of separation of powers through a system of checks and balances.
The system of checks and balances
The most famous US presidential campaigns are Democratic presidential nomination of 1960. The 1789 first US presidential election of George Washington, the 1932 US presidential campaign of Roosevelt as well as the Barack Obama's presidential campaign.
What is the impprtance of the us presidential inauguration