The executive is selected by the legislative branch (usually, the head will be the leader of the party who won the most seats in the legislative election and that head picks their cabinet of executives). Usually, all high executive members (the cabinet) must be elected in the legislature to hold their position.
The legislature is responsible for choosing the executive in the parliamentary form of government. This is the individual that will be responsible for carrying out all leadership of a particular country in which they are in control over.
Parliamentary type of government allows people to elect the executive leader.
In a parliamentary system, the Prime Minister is asked to form a government by the head of state (President or constitutional monarch) normally based on the results of the parliamentary election. The political parties normally try to avoid the head of states embarrassment by agreeing in advance which party or coalition should form the government.
Executive Branch
Any form of government that allows people to elect an executive leader is generally termed a "democratic" government. With that said, it means that the executive leader has the power to enforce laws. Generally speaking in such a government the legislative branch of the government normally allows for the election of legislators.
The Legislature
The parliament elects the Prime Minister, who then chooses the cabinet from the House of Commons and House of Lords.
The legislature is responsible for choosing the executive in the parliamentary form of government. This is the individual that will be responsible for carrying out all leadership of a particular country in which they are in control over.
Parliamentary democracy/ Executive power to the Prime Minister
Parliamentary type of government allows people to elect the executive leader.
parliament
The statement, "The parliamentary form of government gives most of the power of government to the executive" (that is, to the executive branch of the government), is in fact generally false. While an executive branch of a parliamentary system may in fact have tremendous freedom to act politically as its particular genius dictates, it nevertheless receives legitimacy from the legislative branch of the government, which retains the power to revoke the power of the executive branch by formal schedule, in identifiable emergency-situations, or otherwise.
In a parliamentary system, the Prime Minister is asked to form a government by the head of state (President or constitutional monarch) normally based on the results of the parliamentary election. The political parties normally try to avoid the head of states embarrassment by agreeing in advance which party or coalition should form the government.
Iraq is a Parliamentary Democracy with an Executive Prime Minister and a Ceremonial President.
Iraq is a Parliamentary Democracy with an Executive Prime Minister and a Ceremonial President.
The parliamentary system.
Executive Branch