Democracy
It is a federal presidential republic, just like the United States (e.g. it is a democracy)
representative democracy . felipe calderon .
It depends on what you mean by "democratic". There would be at the very least three dates for such "democratization":1824 when Mexico switched from a monarchy into a republic1917 when the ideals of the Mexican Revolution were written in the Mexican Constitution.2000 when the Partido Revolucionario Institucional(Institutional Revolutionary Party) ended it uncontested reign over Mexico's politics.
Swaziland, Liechtenstein, Saudi Arabia, Bhutan are the ones i know for Monarchy. Russia, Belarus, Mexico, Australia, France are the ones for Democracy Venezuela is the one i know for Dictatorship
No. The Mexican president is both head of state and head of government.
The actual form of government is Representative Federal Republic but yes, pretty much it is.
If you mean "democracy" as in giving power to the people to elect their government officials, yes it is: it has almost the same political system of the United States, with some minor differences such as the Electoral College, which doesn't exist in Mexico.
Presidential
they have many including:Monarchy,dictatorship,republic,democracy,and communismThere are many, but some of them include:Presidential Republic (no Prime Minister): Mexico, US, BrazilParliamentary Republic: India, Italy, TurkeyParliamentary Monarchy: England, Spain, JapanAbsolute Monarchy: Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Vatican CitySingle-party governments: Cuba, North Korea, ChinaAnarchy / no formal government: Egypt, Fiji
Yes. Although imperfect, Mexico is a democracy.
The government of Mexico before Revolution (1912-1930) was a dictatorship run by Porfirio Diaz who had been running the country on a postivist model in which industry and the economy came first before all over governing bodies.
Because its government is a federal presidential representative republic, just like the government of the United States.This doesn't mean however, that Mexico is fully democratic, as it still has several issues to solve, such as corruption, election irregularities like ballot theft or votes in exchange of food and health items (soaps, rice, tuna cans).