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Political Institutions. Presentation Outline. 1) Presidential Systems 2) Parliamentary Systems 3) Mixed Systems 4) Authoritarian Systems 5) Party Systems 6) Electoral Systems 7 ) Legal Systems. Democracies. 1) Presidential Systems.
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Presentation Outline 1) Presidential Systems 2) Parliamentary Systems 3) Mixed Systems 4) Authoritarian Systems 5) Party Systems 6) Electoral Systems 7) Legal Systems Democracies
1) Presidential Systems • Power is evenly divided between three branches (executive, legislative, and judicial) • There are separate elections for the legislative and executive branches • The President is both head of the government and head of the state and is directly accountable to the citizens who voted for him/her
Checks and Balances • Presidents can veto laws passed by the legislative branch • The legislative branch can overturn these vetoes and even impeach or remove a president with a 66% majority vote
States which use presidential systems United States Mexico Nigeria Brazil Argentina Philippines
2) Parliamentary Systems • There are three branches (executive, legislative, and judicial) • However, the executive and legislative branches are fused together • Unlike presidential systems, there is only one election for the legislative branch • The executive branch is chosen by the legislative branch
A Fused System Executive Legislative Prime Minister Monarch Members of Parliament Civil Service Cabinet
The Prime Minister is only the head of government • The Monarch is the head of state • The Prime Minister is NOT directly accountable to the citizens • Rather, the Prime Minister is accountable to Parliament which has the power the defeat his/her government with a vote of confidence
States which use parliamentary systems: The ones colored orange have a president as figurehead and head of state. The ones colored red have a monarch as figurehead and head of state.
3) Mixed Systems • Semi-presidential or mixed presidential-parliamentary systems have a president and a prime minister • The president is more powerful and appoints the prime minister in this system • The president is the head of state and is considered the chief of government • The prime minister is only the head of the parliament • The president is directly elected by citizens
States which use mixed systems Russia South Korea France
4) Authoritarian systems • Authoritarian systems may have president, chairman, or general • Elections are NOT competitive and the head of state and head of government is NOT accountable to his/her citizens • Normally only one party is permitted • This includes: communist, fascist, and military dictatorships; theocracies and absolute monarchies
States which currently use authoritarian systems China North Korea Vietnam Saudi Arabia
5) Party Systems • Democratic states have either two party or multi-party systems • States which use proportional representation tend to have more political parties • Parties are generally organized and established around a common political ideology
Political Spectrum Left Right Traditional spectrum
6)Electoral Systems • Democratic systems elect leaders and representatives using either a single-member-district (SMD) system or a proportional representation (PR) system • Some states such as Mexico use both
Single Member District (SMD) • Candidates must be elected in districts across the state • Only the candidate with the most votes (plurality) wins the district and goes to the national parliament • Candidates finishing in second or third place do not go to parliament Vancouver-East District in Canada
Less parties tend to be elected to parliament • The largest party tends to have an exaggerated victory • Majority governments are more common 2010 UK Election Results *Based on a 650 seat House of Commons 326 seats needed to form a majority government
Proportional Representation (PR) • Voters normally choose political parties rather than candidates • Seats are determined proportionally • A party which receives 25% of the vote will get 25% of the seats in parliament • Parties determine which candidates will fill the seats in parliament • Results in many more parties elected to parliament
7) Legal systems • Most states use civil codelegal systems (China, Iran, Mexico, Russia) where all laws are written down • In the U.K. and other former British colonies common law is used where laws are based on precedents or previous decisions of judges
Judicial Review • Many democratic states have judicial review • Judicial review gives the supreme court the power to overturn decisions made by the president or legislature which are unconstitutional • Judicial review is seen as another way to ensure that leaders do not abuse their political power
States with the powers of judicial review: States without the powers of judicial review: • The United States • Russia • Nigeria • Mexico • The U.K. • China • Iran