In a parliamentary democracy the leader is elected by the parliament. In a presidential democracy the leader is elected by the people.
Parliamentary Democracy.
The prime minister.
A parliamentary system. Elected representatives in a parliamentary system vote for a leader, such as a prime minister, among themselves. The leader is typically the head of the majority party or coalition in the legislature.
It is a parliamentary democracy.
Decision by the natural courts
parliamentary democracy can vote for one representative who will pick an official called a prime minster. Representative democracy gets to pick their own representative and don't have to have an official. That's the difference between parliamentary and representative democracy.
prime minister
The widely used definition of Presidential Democracy is "A system of government where the executive branch exists separately from a legislature" whereas, Parliamentary Democracy is defined as "A party with greatest representation in the parliament and its leader becoming the prime minister or chancellor".
parliamentary democracy, democratic form of government in which the party (or a coalition of parties) with the greatest representation in theparliament (legislature) forms the government, its leader becoming prime minister or chancellor.
The head of the government of a democratic country is usually either the President or Prime Minister depending on whether it is a Presidential Republic or a Parliamentary Democracy.
No. In the parliamentary system, we elect MPs and not leaders. For the duration of their terms, MPs a responsible for deciding who should form the government. This is beneficial because it means that we can become familiar with a new leader either as premier or opposition leader before we have to decide whether we need a change in government. It would be detrimental for democracy in a parliamentary system for a major party to go into an election with an unknown leader.