Mayor–council government

form of local government with a voter-elected executive mayor and a separately voter-elected legislative council From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Mayor-Council government system, sometimes called the Mayor-Commission government system, is one of two variations of government most commonly used in modern representative municipal governments in the United States.

Strong-mayor form

Strong-mayor is a form of mayor-council government. It is made up of an executive branch and a legislative branch. Both branches are elected by the people. The executive brance is usually a city mayor. The legislature is usually a city council.[1]

References

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