That depends on the company or organization. IN a publicly held corporation, the CEO is generally selected by the Board of Directors, and the Board is generally elected by stockholders of the company.
In a privately owned company, the CEO is selected by the owner(s) of the company.
In governmental organizations, the selection process is defined in the law that constituted the organization. For the United States of America, the process is defined in the Constitution.
The Chief of Police is not an elective office. Depending on the type of local government they are usually appointed by the chief executive of the city administration (Mayor - City Manager - City Council - etc).
The citizens of the u.s.
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The house elects its own chief officer. This is done by holding an election and appointing the leading official as the Speaker of the House.
The plural of "chief executive" is "chief executives"
no he is not, the house elects their chief speaker but the presedent is the chief officer...
There are different titles for the chief executive. In some countries the chief executive is call president. In many companies, he or she is called the chief executive or chief executive officer.
The good thing is that the voters have a say in the chief executive AND the legislative branch. However in a parliamentary democracy, they only have a say in the leg. branch who elects the chief executive which is a good thing to some people because that branch is more educated than the general public about politics.
Individually, chiefs, executives, officers. Collectively, Chief Executive Officers
Chief Executive Officer
The US Government Chief Executive is the President.