Asked by khare

What is one of the key differences between parliamentary democracies and presidential democracies?

The head of government has legislative power in a presidential democracy, but does not have legislative power in a parliamentary democracy.


The head of government has executive power in a presidential democracy, but does not have executive power in a parliamentary democracy.


The head of government has legislative power in a parliamentary democracy, but does not have legislative power in a presidential democracy.


The head of government has executive power in a parliamentary democracy, but does not have executive power in a presidential democracy.



Line Reader

Text Magnifier

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The correct choice is:

"The head of government has legislative power in a parliamentary democracy, but does not have legislative power in a presidential democracy."

Explanation: In parliamentary systems the prime minister is usually a member of the legislature and can directly sponsor and influence laws; in presidential systems the president is separate from the legislature (separation of powers) and does not sit in it.