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by seszett
1014 days ago
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> It is an Americanism because the term implicitly assumes two things: > 1. That the government is split into branches, following how the US system evolved. > 2. That executive power must be confined to a single branch, also how the US is organized. I'm pretty sure these principles are originally French. The American system was built around these principles as well, but calling them American is a whole new level of Americentrism. Separation of powers into three branches is basically a prerequisite for belonging to the EU, as it is considered a basic requirement for a democracy. For that matter, the US and France are probably two of the modern democracies that have the least separation between these powers (on paper). |
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I'll concede that - certainly.
> Separation of powers into three branches is basically a prerequisite for belonging to the EU, as it is considered a basic requirement for a democracy
The EU is concerned more with judicial independence, not constitutional separation-of-powers: most EU countries (and especially its founding and early members) do not have separation strictly along judicial/legislative/executive boundary lines: The UK, Germany, Spain, and others all have an executive parliament; France and the US are in the minority here.