Asked by yo
Match each items to its corresponding category. Note, each category does not have the same number of answers.
Category
Presidential System
Category
Both
Category
Parliamentary System
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don’t see the list of items you want matched. Could you paste the items (words/phrases) to sort into the three categories?
If you meant a general/example matching, here’s a common set of features mapped to each category that may help:
Presidential System
- President is both head of state and head of government
- President elected independently of the legislature (popular vote or electoral college)
- Clear separation of powers between executive and legislature
- Executive cannot normally be removed by a simple legislative vote of no confidence
- Cabinet members are usually not simultaneously members of the legislature
- Fixed terms for the president
Parliamentary System
- Prime minister is head of government; head of state is separate (monarch or president)
- Executive depends on the confidence of the legislature (vote of no confidence can remove government)
- Fusion of powers: cabinet is drawn from and accountable to the legislature
- Cabinet members are usually members of the legislature
- Government formation depends on majority support in parliament
Both
- Regular competitive elections
- Political parties
- Rule of law and a legislature that makes statutes
- Bicameral or unicameral legislatures (both systems can have either)
- A written or unwritten constitution (depending on the country)
If you provide the specific items you have, I’ll sort each one into Presidential / Parliamentary / Both.
If you meant a general/example matching, here’s a common set of features mapped to each category that may help:
Presidential System
- President is both head of state and head of government
- President elected independently of the legislature (popular vote or electoral college)
- Clear separation of powers between executive and legislature
- Executive cannot normally be removed by a simple legislative vote of no confidence
- Cabinet members are usually not simultaneously members of the legislature
- Fixed terms for the president
Parliamentary System
- Prime minister is head of government; head of state is separate (monarch or president)
- Executive depends on the confidence of the legislature (vote of no confidence can remove government)
- Fusion of powers: cabinet is drawn from and accountable to the legislature
- Cabinet members are usually members of the legislature
- Government formation depends on majority support in parliament
Both
- Regular competitive elections
- Political parties
- Rule of law and a legislature that makes statutes
- Bicameral or unicameral legislatures (both systems can have either)
- A written or unwritten constitution (depending on the country)
If you provide the specific items you have, I’ll sort each one into Presidential / Parliamentary / Both.
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