State Legislatures have rotating terms of office as does the U.S. Congress. In each case, each seat is entitled to one vote. States and Congress have a bicameral structure relying on committees for initial recommendations.
The "leaders" of local and national governments are "chosen" by elections, in which all citizens vote. That includes male, female, land owners, and non-landowners, of any religion and ethnic background. None of these factors is a 'test' or requirement for citizenship. The structure of Israel's national government is similar to the national governments of Canada, Australia, Japan, the UK, and others. (But not the USA.)
All European governments seemed similar, but they're actually different regarding structure in their governments
Brttian
The government in the colony of North Carolina was similar to the other colonies. These governments were run as English governments with structures from England.
It was a theocracy.
City governments often have a city council system. This is analogous to a county board of commissioners system of government.
commission model
commission model
Mostly monarchies but they also have democracies and governments similar to the USA.
True
both governments had prime ministers and parliaments
all governments have represenatives