***
[[parlementarisme|parliamentarian regime]] are really *flexible* so they often avoid policy deadlocks. If there is a deadlock (blocage), the parliament removes the [[pouvoir exécutif|executive]] from office.
They are really *stable* regimes. They tend to last long. But we have to distinguish government stability and regime stability. Because the government can be removed several times but if it permits the lasting of the regime then it's okay.
Ex : Third Republic, a lot of governments but it lasted 70 years and was just destroyed by a foreign invasion
Instability can exist but there is rules to prevent that :
ex :
-> *[[constructive vote of no confidence]]* in Germany
However, it is possible to have too much *concentration of power*.[^1] The PM can be too strong and dismissing him can be difficult. But it depends on the system.
The PM controls the agenda and the majority of parliament.
## Notes de bas de page
``` dataview
TABLE length(file.outlinks) AS "Liens sortants", length(file.inlinks) AS "Liens entrants"
WHERE file.path = this.file.path
```
[^1]: [[séparation des pouvoirs|separation of powers]]