Yuuki Oojima and his childhood friend Chisato Sumiyoshi belong to the Food Research Club, a sociable place in school dedicated to chatting and taste testing the latest snacks. Other members include their close friend Mifuyu, Yuuki’s self-proclaimed homosexual lover Yume, gadget developer Nozomi, the inseparable duo Ai and Kii, reserved Michiru, and an advisor who drinks all day. But with the next student council presidential election looming, popular candidate Satsuki plans to preserve school funding by terminating obstructive clubs - including theirs! Realizing the Food Research Club is in jeopardy if she is elected, the members declare a presidential campaign of their own. Can Yuuki and his invaluable friends win the election to protect their precious snack-eating society, or will they be disbanded for good?
Tomoya Okazaki is a third-year high school student who is generally bored with life and doesn't take his studies, future, or anything else seriously. One day, however, he meets a lonely-looking girl in the school courtyard, Nagisa Furukawa. She explains to him the source of her loneliness: she had missed a lot of the previous school year and thus is repeating her third year; everybody that she knew has already graduated, and she is lonely. Tomoya is rather indifferent at first, but decides that he has nothing better to do and spends increasingly more time helping Nagisa restore the school drama club. As his relationship with Nagisa grows, Tomoya begins to open up to various other people around the school as well...
Both shows feature a main male character with multiple girls who become infatuated with him, and in the end, a relationship develops with one of the girls. The romance is not the primary focus of either show, although it becomes an important element in the development of the characters. One focuses on creating a drama club, and the other on saving the food club.
Both settings are at a school for somewhat wealthy students, the male protagonist gets elected to be the class representative/run for student council president, a female protagonist has a mysterious hatred towards boys/chocolate and another heroine both have an adult relative working at the school. "Love" and "Lovers" being in both of these titles give it away that romance plays a big factor into the story, so I believe there's enough similarities between these two for you to like each.