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This article focuses on the cases where the Head of Government is a separate office from the Head of State.Head of government is the chief officer of the
executive branch of a government, often presiding over a
cabinet. In a
parliamentary system, the head of government is often styled
Prime Minister,
President of the Government,
Premier, etc. In
presidential republics or
monarchies, the head of government may be the same person as the
head of state, who is often called respectively a
president or a
monarch.
In
semi-presidential systems, the Head of Government may answer to both the Head of State and the legislative power (such as parliament). An example is the
French Fifth Republic (1958-present), where the
Président de la République appoints a Prime Minister but must choose someone who can get government business through, and has the support of, the
National Assembly. When the opposition controls the National Assembly (and thus government funding and most legislation), the President is in effect forced to choose a Prime Minister from the opposition; in such cases, known as
cohabitation, the government controls internal state policy, with the President restricted largely to foreign affairs.
The current record of longest-serving head of government in a
democratic nation is
Lee Kuan Yew, who was
Prime Minister of
Singapore from 1959 to 1990, a total of 31 consecutive years.