http://ciir2.cs.umass.edu/Govbot/ - Govbot is a searchable database of government websites with some advanced searching options, such as requiring or rejecting certain words or phrases from a website's URL or title. Give it a try. They only crawl .gov and .mil sites, so your search is already highly targeted to government areas.
http://www.searchgov.com/ - SearchGov.com provides a great tool for government information. Their searches provide extensive and relevant results, and on the main page they have links to every state, executive agencies, private agencies, and other helpful links. A very high quality site.
http://www.fedworld.gov/ - What FedWorld can offer is a comprehensive central access point for searching, locating, ordering and acquiring government and business information. A good feature of their site is a specific search for U.S. government reports; a great tool for anyone doing research that requires official documentation.
http://www.catalaw.com/ - CataLaw is a searchable index of legal information on the internet with a unique quality: It is an index of other indexes, or a "metaindex." In other words, it is a catalog of catalogs of government and law on the internet. CataLaw speeds research by arranging all government and legal indexes on the internet into a single, simple, intuitive metaindex. CataLaw is designed to ease the difficulty of finding government and law info on the Internet.
http://www.google.com/unclesam - Do you see the stars and stripes background on the Google logo? That means that Google: Unclesam has brought its amazing searching ability to the field of government. When you search from this screen, Google will bring back results only from government (.gov) sites.
http://www.searchbug.com/government/ - Don't swat at the SearchBug, for here you will find all the information you need on local, state, federal and international governments. Find a listing of government officials, government organizations, government publications, and the latest news from governments around the world.
http://vos.ucsb.edu/shuttle/politics.html - The Voice of the Shuttle's Politics and Government page, run by the University of California-Santa Barbara, has comprehensive information on politics, both United States and international, as well as political theories/philosophies from many countries, including France, the UK and Russia. The VOS also lists magazines and journals for further information on these topics.
http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/chiefs/index.html- Run by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, this is an official directory searchable by country. Listed are the names of all Chiefs of State and Cabinet Members for every country, as well as UN ambassadors, ambassadors to the US, and heads of central banks. Updated monthly.
http://www.gksoft.com/govt/ - Comprehensive database of governmental institutions on the internet: parliaments, ministries, offices, law courts, embassies, city councils, public broadcasting corporations, central banks, multi-governmental institutions etc. Includes also political parties. Contains more than 15000 entries from more than 220 countries and territories as of June 2000.
http://www.trytel.com/~aberdeen/ - Ever wonder who runs the country of Vanuatu, or Togo, or Mexico? This site lists the people in power for 196 countries, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe. In addition to the names, this site provides, when possible, phone/fax numbers, email addresses and websites for each person.
http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/Guides/Government/ - For anyone looking for the Southern Hemisphere slant on things, this site has been created by the University of Sydney to help you locate government information on the internet. It contains links to sites which provide full-text government documents and related information, and to sites which index government and political resources. Sites are included if they contain useful content, are provided by an authoritative source (such as a government body, university, or responsible organization) and are current or updated regularly.
http://www.library.nwu.edu/govpub/resource/internat/foreign.html - Northwestern University's page for Government Publications and Maps. The page lists nearly every country in the world, in alphabetical order, and then provides a list of websites related to each. These websites detail each country's government, politics, economy, and culture.
http://www.politicalresources.net/ - Political Resources on the Net has information on every country in the world. These countries are sorted alphabetically within their region. Just click on the world map for the region and the list of countries comes up. You are supplied with links to pages regarding political parties and organizations, governments, media, and each country's economy.
http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/govweb.html - The University of Michigan's Document Center has information on local, state and the federal US Government, as well as links to the websites of a variety of countries. It also provides links to state government homepages, as well as links to many federal government sites.
http://www.worldworld.com/ - WorldWorld shows the flag of 143 countries, simply click on a country's flag and this site takes you there, where any and all information is waiting. And when you're done, WorldWorld will send you off to your next destination. Learn about governments and customs from anywhere in the world.
http://www.govspot.com - GovSpot.com is a good government information portal. This free, non-partisan site simplifies the search for government websites and documents, facts and figures, news, public policy information, political
organizations, and much more.