The type of government used in Ancient Rome was very similiar to that of the US. There was an Assembely of 500 which was kind of like the Senate. Also, the people were paid to attend small "town hall" meetings. They had a democracy, but had no specific leader. Also to be a citizen, a person needed to be a white male, above the age of 18, whose parent's were both Roman citizens.
The type of government used in Ancient Rome was very similiar to that of the US. There was an Assembely of 500 which was kind of like the Senate. Also, the people were paid to attend small "town hall" meetings. They had a democracy, but had no specific leader. Also to be a citizen, a person needed to be a white male, above the age of 18, whose parent's were both Roman citizens.
In multi-party systems, parties with similar ideals but with small voter bases can create coalitions. These are good as they mean the voter base isn't split over small differences, making it easier for the coalition to win. Hope this helped :)