No, the UK is a constitutional monarchy and a parlimentary democracy. Firstly, this means that a monarchy exists, but as a head of state with little power for controlling the country (other countries such as Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain and Norway have this system). Secondly, this means that the UK has a Parliament which makes legislation and controls the executive branch of the government. The opposite of this would be a presidential democracy, where the executive branch is led by the President and works seperately from a Congress. Parliamentary systems can have a President themselves, but this is not the case in the UK.
There is no English representative body. England is a part of, but not the same as, The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The representative - ie elected - part of the UK Government is The House of Commons a part of the UK parliament.
was representative government important in Pennsylvania was representative government important in Pennsylvania
Representative democracy and constitution.
Representative government (apex)
Representative Government
representative
Representative Government
A government in which people elect delegates to make laws is a Representative Government. A Democracy could be representative or direct.
validate America as a representative government
The Romans never had a representative government.
Representative government. Of course, there are many different types of Representative government - for instance, the People's Republic of China, the United States of American, and the United Kingdom all have a form of representative government, though the details (and result) differ greatly.
True Federalists supported representative government