Asked by ve
How did the Soviet style of government differ from American democracy?
It lacked a legislative body.
It had a parliamentary system.
It was led by a dictator.
It was ruled by a monarch.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
It was led by a dictator.
Explanation: The Soviet system was a one-party, centrally controlled state where real power rested with the Communist Party leadership (often concentrated in a single leader), unlike American democracy’s competitive elections and separation of powers. The Soviet Union did have nominal legislative bodies (Supreme Soviet), was not a parliamentary democracy in the Western sense, and was not a monarchy.
Explanation: The Soviet system was a one-party, centrally controlled state where real power rested with the Communist Party leadership (often concentrated in a single leader), unlike American democracy’s competitive elections and separation of powers. The Soviet Union did have nominal legislative bodies (Supreme Soviet), was not a parliamentary democracy in the Western sense, and was not a monarchy.
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