In Belgium, the community government is unique as it is elected by members of specific language communities, namely Dutch, French, and German-speaking, irrespective of their place of residence. This government handles cultural, educational, and language-related matters for each ethnic community. It’s a model of power-sharing in democracies, catering to Belgium’s diverse ethnic makeup. Belgium operates under a federal system and is a representative democracy with a constitutional monarchy. The King is the head of state, while the Prime Minister leads the government in a multi-party framework. The executive branch is the government, and legislative powers are shared between the government and the two parliamentary chambers, the Senate and the Chamber of Representatives. Elections for community and regional parliaments, aligning with the European Parliament elections, occur every five years. This governance structure was established to manage tensions between Belgium’s major linguistic communities and to provide them with more control over cultural issues.