Politics: The Basics, 4th Edition

(Ann) #1

1967/8), but in most West European states as well (Smith, 1989:
Chs. 5, 7, 8). Derbyshire and Derbyshire (1996: 40) classified fifty-five
states as having parliamentary executives, most of which were
Commonwealth members. Presidential systems, in this sense, are
those like the United States of America with an executive presi-
dent; they are the most common form of constitutional government,
with seventy-seven states classified as limited presidential executives
by the Derbyshires. They are found chiefly in the Americas and Africa.
The main differences between the systems may be expressed in
terms of the separation and balance of powers. Following Montes-
quieu’s interpretation of the eighteenth-century British constitution,
presidential systems not only divide the powers of government
into legislative (law making), executive (law enforcing) and judicial
(law interpreting) institutions, but seek to separate these in terms
of personnel and balance them against each other. Democratic
government is seen in terms of a refusal to concentrate potentially
tyrannical power so that it cannot be used to take away individual
rights. Federalism is seen as a further expression of the same approach.
In parliamentary systems the main expression of democracy is
seen in the enforcement of the responsibility of the executive to the
people through Parliament – in practice the independence of the


STATES 143

Table 6.2 Parliamentary versus presidential systems

Parliamentary system Presidential system
Assembly ‘Parliament’ Assembly only
Executive Separate heads of state Popularly elected president
and government
Head of government Appointed by head of state Also head of state
Appointment of Head of government President appoints
government appoints ministry departmental heads
Responsibility Government is collectively President is responsible to
responsible to Assembly people
Personnel Ministers usually Executive/legislative
parliamentarians separation
Dissolution of By head of state on advice Not possible
assembly of head of government
Source: Verney (1959)
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