The cabinet system of government embody the principle of separation of powers because

a

it does not encourage the appointment of a president

b

the exective is not separate from the legislature

c

it gives less powers to a prime minister than a president

d

the executive is not directly appointed by the electorate

e

the speaker controls the activities of the house

Download Offline App Ask a Question

Explanation

Correct Option
b

Video Explanation

No video available

Post your Contribution

Share:

Discussions (7)

J678
3 months ago

Actually, this is a trick question because the Cabinet (Parliamentary) system is usually the opposite of "Separation of Powers"—it is based on the Fusion of Powers.
However, if your past question is asking why it embodies the principle or how it functions, the correct answer is B. the executive is not separate from the legislature.
Wait, how does that work?
In a Cabinet system (like the UK), the Prime Minister and all Ministers must be members of Parliament. This means the Executive and Legislature are "fused" together.
The reason this is sometimes used to explain "Separation" in exams is to highlight the contrast:
In a Presidential system (like Nigeria/USA), the President is separate from the Legislature.
In a Cabinet system, they are not separate, but they still have different functions.
Breakdown of the Options:
❌ A: Having or not having a President (who might just be a figurehead) isn't what defines the separation of powers.
✅ B (Correct/Key Feature): This is the defining characteristic of the Cabinet system. The Executive is "born" out of the Legislature.
❌ C: A Prime Minister can actually be more powerful than a President because they lead the majority in Parliament, making it easier to pass laws.
❌ D: While true (the PM is chosen by the party, not the people directly), this describes appointment, not the division of power between branches.
❌ E: The Speaker manages the House, but this doesn't explain the relationship between the Executive and the Legislature.
Important Exam Tip:
If the question asks for a system that strictly follows the Separation of Powers, the answer is always the Presidential System. If it asks about a system where powers are fused, the answer is the Cabinet/Parliamentary System.
Does it make sense why B is the "odd one out" compared to how the USA or Nigeria runs their government?
AI can make mistakes, so double-check responses
I THINK THIS WOULD HELP US COMPREHEND IT. THEY ARE FUSED BUT THEY EMBODY SEPARATION OF POWER IN THE FACT THAT THEY ARE FUSED BUT PERFORM DIFFERENT OR SEPARATE FUNCTIONS

DHarts
1 year ago

Do you know the meaning of "embody"?

If you do, then there's no way B would be the right answer.

CCA_01
1 year ago

no explanation

DHarts
1 year ago
Image

here are the meanings of the word "embody"
The provided answer is incorrect.

Quick Questions

Ask a Question

abdullahibabajide63

22nd June, 2026


1 comments
CO

ceoofwahala

20th June, 2026

Chemistry


2 comments

ASSAAS

20th June, 2026

English Language


5 comments