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Title: By Loren Miller


1
THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH
  • By Loren Miller

2
THE PRESIDENCY
  • No man will ever bring out of the Presidency the
    reputation which carries him into it. To myself,
    personally, it brings nothing but increasing
    drudgery and daily loss of friends.
  • Thomas Jefferson

3
THE PRESIDENCY
  • As to the presidency, the two happiest days of
    my life were those of my entrance upon the office
    and my surrender of it.
  • Martin Van Buren

4
THE PRESIDENCY
  • After the White House what is there to do but
    drink!
  • Franklin Pierce

5
THE PRESIDENCY
  • After Vice President Truman heard about the
    death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, he said to a
    small collection of reporters
  • Boys, if you ever pray, pray for me now.

6
THE PRESIDENCY
  • All the president is, is a glorified public
    relations man who spends his time flattering,
    kissing, and kicking people to get them to do
    what they are supposed to do anyway.
  • Harry Truman

7
EVOLUTION OF THE PRESIDENCYChief Clerk
1789-1836
  • Presidents perform administrative duties that
    Congress requests.
  • Government is best that governs the least.
  • Presidents focused their attention on foreign
    affairs while Congress focused on domestic
    matters.
  • Madison found himself unable to fund the War of
    1812 and unable to raise an army.
  • The Monroe Doctrine
  • Congress forged key compromises on slavery and
    paid of most of the national debt.
  • Andrew Jackson, an outsider, grabs the reins of
    government and remakes the presidency.
  • Forced out Cabinet members who disagreed with
    him.
  • Introduced the spoils system.

8
EVOLUTION OF THE PRESIDENCYWeakened Presidency
1837-1900
  • Andrew Jacksons popularity and energetic
    personality raised the profile of the office.
    However, those who followed Jackson (with some
    exceptions) reverted back to chief clerk.
    Exceptions include
  • James Polk westward expansion used his power
    as commander in chief to instigate war with
    Mexico acquired California, Arizona and Oregon
    Territory.
  • Abraham Lincoln blockaded southern ports
    suspended the writ of habeas corpus spent money
    without Congressional approval raised an army
    without Congressional approval.
  • Abraham Lincoln reinterpreted Article II into a
    source of executive authority during emergencies.

9
EVOLUTION OF THE PRESIDENCYThe Modern
Presidency 1901-1945
  • As the United States industrialized and became a
    significant player in an interconnected world,
    the power of the presidency grew accordingly.
  • Theodore Roosevelt used the office as a bully
    pulpit. He wanted to be the bride at every
    wedding and the corpse at every funeral.
  • Bold assertions of presidential power The
    Stewardship Theory
  • Breaks up corporate monopolies
  • Initiates a Panamanian revolution
  • Wins a Nobel Peace Prize (mediating Japan/Russia)
    settlement
  • Sends fleet around the world
  • First president to travel to a foreign country

10
EVOLUTION OF THE PRESIDENCYThe Modern
Presidency 1901-1945
  • Woodrow Wilson achieved some significant
    successes and suffered some great failures.
  • Achieved industrial reforms
  • Led the United States into World War I
  • Led efforts to create a League of Nations
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal
  • Permanent bureaucracies
  • Social Security and unemployment insurance
  • Use of the media to communicate directly with the
    publicfireside chats
  • Lend-Lease Program prior to U.S. involvement in
    WWII (without consent of Congress)
  • Gave Britain 50 destroyers in exchange for rights
    to build military based on British territory
    (without consent of Congress)
  • The national government became the focus of power

11
EVOLUTION OF THE PRESIDENCYImperial Presidency
Under Attack 1945-1980
  • By the end of World War II, the presidency had
    become a very powerful office and emphasis on the
    cold war in the 1950s and 1960s added to the
    presidents power.
  • The Truman Doctrine
  • Sending troops to Vietnam
  • Watergate, Richard Nixons resignation and Jimmy
    Carters inability to resolve the Iranian hostage
    situation frustrated the public and the
    presidency came under increasing attacks from
    Congress.

12
EVOLUTION OF THE PRESIDENCYThe Contemporary
Presidency 1980-
  • Following the Vietnam War and Watergate, the
    powers of the modern presidency has been
    diminished as the resources for presidential
    power fall short of the tasks he is expected to
    perform
  • - divided government became the norm
  • - a high national debt and budget deficits
    limited the expansion of federal programs
  • What is required to succeed on the campaign trail
    is different from what is needed to handle the
    global demands of a modern president.

13
LEGAL REQUIREMENTSFOR PRESIDENT
  • at least 35 years of age
  • have lived in the United States 14 years
  • be a natural born citizen of the United States

14
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15
PRESIDENTIAL TRIVIA
  • Only divorced president Reagan
  • Only bachelor president Buchanan
  • Shortest Term Harrison (1 month)
  • Largest President Taft (350 pounds)
  • Smallest President Madison (95
  • pounds)
  • Youngest President Roosevelt (42)
  • Oldest President Reagan (77)

16
INFORMAL CRITERIAFOR PRESIDENT
  • Political Experience
  • 1868-1956 gubernatorial experience preferred
  • 1960-1972 senatorial experience preferred
  • 1972 to the present ???????
  • Vice-president??

17
INFORMAL CRITERIAFOR PRESIDENT
  • Vice-president??
  • VPs who became President by election
  • 1800s Adams, Jefferson, Van Buren
  • 1900s T. Roosevelt, Coolidge, Truman,
    Nixon, Johnson, Bush
  • Military Hero??

18
THE VICE PRESIDENCY
  • If Washington is called Mr. President, then you
    need to call me Your superfluous excellency.
  • John Adams, our first Vice President
  • The Vice Presidency is the most insignificant
    office that ever the invention of man contrived
    or his imagination conceived.
  • John Adams

19
THE VICE PRESIDENCY
  • The Vice Presidency isnt worth a warm bucket of
    piss.
  • John Nance Garner, one of FDRs Vice Presidents
  • I do not propose to be buried until I am really
    dead.
  • Daniel Webster, on not accepting the Vice
    Presidency

20
THE VICE PRESIDENCY
  • A little over a week ago, I took a rather
    unusual step for a vice president . . . I said
    something.
  • Spiro Agnew, Vice President under Richard Nixon
  • Look at all the Vice Presidents in history.
    Where are they? They were about as useful as a
    cows fifth teat.
  • Harry S Truman, one of FDRs Vice Presidents

Eisenhower/Nixon
21
THE VICE PRESIDENCY
  • Once the election is over, the Vice Presidents
    usefulness is over. Hes like the second stage
    of a rocket. Hes damn important going into
    orbit, but hes always thrown off to burn up in
    the atmosphere.
  • An aide to Vice President Hubert Humphrey
  • The Job of the Vice President is to go to
    weddings and funerals.
  • Harry S Truman

22
THE VICE PRESIDENCY
  • Possibly our worst Vice President was Thomas
    Marshall (Wilsons VP)
  • As vice president, I am responsible
  • for nothing and influential nowhere
  • My job is like a monkey cage except
  • that visitors do not offer me peanuts
  • In his inaugural address he promised to
    acknowledge the insignificant influence of the
    office
  • He once told a bodyguard that his job was
    pointless as
  • no one every shoots a Vice President

23
THE VICE PRESIDENCY
  • Recent vice presidents have been given greater
    access to the president and have been given more
    responsibilities than earlier vice presidents.
  • Al Gore and Dick Cheney
  • Would Joe Biden have accepted the vice presidency
    unless he was given access and responsibilities?

24
INFORMAL CRITERIAFOR PRESIDENT
  • Executive Ability
  • the ability to hire good people
  • Ideology
  • middle of the road

25
INFORMAL CRITERIAFOR PRESIDENT
  • Physical Stamina
  • Mental Stability
  • Knowledge of the Issues
  • Nominated by one of the two major parties

26
PRESIDENTIAL OATH
  • I _____ do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I
    will faithfully execute the office of President
    of the United States, and will to the best of my
    ability, preserve, protect, and defend the
    Constitution of the United States.
  • -- Washington added So help me God and others
    followed this tradition
  • -- Why do presidents have the choice of swear
    or affirm
  • -- So Quakers could run for the office
  • -- Only Franklin Pierce (1853) affirmed

27
THE JOB OF PRESIDENT
  • Act as Commander in Chief
  • Negotiate Treaties
  • Receive Foreign Ambassadors
  • Nominate Top Federal Officials
  • Veto Bills
  • Faithfully Administer Federal Laws
  • Pardon Persons for Federal Offenses
  • Address Congress and the Nation

28
WHAT WE LOOK FOR
What we Really Want
29
THE BEST WORST
  • THE BEST
  • THE WORST

1. Franklin D. Roosevelt 2. Abraham Lincoln 3.
George Washington 4. Thomas Jefferson 5.
Theodore Roosevelt 6. Woodrow Wilson 7. Harry S
Truman 8. Ronald Reagan 9. Andrew Jackson 10.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
1. James Buchanan 2. Franklin Pearce 3. Warren
Harding 4. John Tyler 5. Andrew Johnson 6.
Millard Fillmore 7. William Henry Harrison 8.
Zachary Taylor 9. Chester Arthur 10. G.W. Bush
2011
30
GREAT PRESIDENTS ARE
  • Blessed with a great crisis
  • Resolve the crisis in an innovative and creative
    way
  • Leave a legacy

31
CONCEPTS OF PRESIDENTIAL POWER
  • Narrow (Whig Model)-- presidential power is
    limited to the specific grants of power
    enumerated in the Constitution
  • Pre-TR and Taft, Harding and Coolidge
  • Broad (Stewardship Model) -- presidential power
    is greater than what is enumerated in the
    Constitution
  • the role of precedent

32
PRESIDENTIAL CHARACTER
  • What should we look for in a president?
  • James David Barber, Duke University
  • Presidential Character is the way a President
    orients himself toward life.
  • Developed mainly during childhood
  • Self-esteem underlies character.
  • The better people feel about themselves, the more
    likely they will be able to accept criticism,
    think rationally, and learn on the job.

33
PRESIDENTIAL CHARACTER
  • Based on two dimensions
  • 1. The amount of energy a person puts into being
    president
  • active or passive
  • Plays the roles of being president aggressively
  • Rarely plays the roles of being president
    aggressively except during crisis
  • 2. How a person feels about being president
  • positive or negative
  • Enjoys the job of being president flexible
  • Unhappy in the job anxious

34
PRESIDENTIAL CHARACTER
  Positive Negative
        Active           ADAPTIVE self-confident flexible creates opportunities for action enjoys the exercise of power, does not take himself too seriously optimistic emphasizes the "rational mastery" of his environment power used as a means to achieve beneficial results. COMPULSIVE power as a means to self-realization expends great energy on tasks but derives little joy preoccupied with whether he is failing or succeeding low self-esteem inclined to rigidity and pessimism highly driven problem managing aggression.  
    Passive   COMPLIANT seek to be loved easily manipulated low self-esteem is overcome by ingratiating personality reacts rather than initiates superficially optimistic. WITHDRAWN responds to a sense of duty avoid power low self-esteem compensated by service to others responds rather than initiates avoids conflict and uncertainty. emphasizes principles and procedures and an aversion to politicking.  

35
PRESIDENTIAL CHARACTER
36
PRESIDENTIAL ROLES
? Constitutional Powers
37
LEGISLATIVE LEADER
  • When does Congress follow the lead of the
    president?
  • The Honeymoon Period
  • International Crisis

38
LEGISLATIVE LEADER
  • When does Congress follow the lead of the
    president?
  • The Honeymoon Period
  • International Crisis
  • Luck
  • Commanding majority in Congress

39
LEGISLATIVE LEADER
  • When does Congress follow the lead of the
    president?
  • The Honeymoon Period
  • International Crisis
  • Luck
  • Commanding majority in Congress
  • Skilled at manipulation (LBJ Treatment)

40
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41
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42
NOTHING LIKE A GOOD CRISIS !
President Event
Increase in Approval
  • Truman Korea Invaded
    9
  • Eisenhower Egypt Seizes Suez Canal
    7
  • Kennedy Cuban Missile Crisis
    13
  • Johnson Bombing Halt of N. Vietnam
    14
  • Nixon Vietnam Peace Agreement
    16
  • Carter Hostages Seized in Iran
    28
  • Bush Iraq Invasion of Kuwait
    20
  • Clinton Invasion of Haiti
    5
  • Bush September 11th
    38

43
Presidents Under Unified Government
44
Presidents Under Divided Government
45
APPROVAL RATINGS
46
APPROVAL RATINGS
47
APPROVAL RATINGS
48
APPROVAL RATINGS
49
APPROVAL RATINGS
50
APPROVAL RATINGS
51
APPROVAL RATINGS
52
APPROVAL RATINGS
53
APPROVAL RATINGS
54
Approval Ratings
Average High Low
Truman 45 87 23 Eisenhower
65 79 48 Kennedy 70 83
56 Johnson 55 79 35 Nixon
49 67 24 Ford 47 71
37 Carter 45 75 28 Reagan
53 68 35 H.W. Bush 61 89
29 Clinton 55 73 27 G.W. Bush
49 90 25 Obama 49 69 38
2012
55
Why Approval RatingsGo Down Over Time
  • Expectations rise in campaigns and are dashed as
    time limits resources
  • Things get blamed, rightly or wrongly, on the
    president
  • Major negative events influence how people
    evaluate presidents
  • Press and media criticism accumulate over time

56
PRESIDENTIAL AGENDA
New Requests to Congress
57
VETO POWER
  • Threat of a Veto
  • Line Item Veto
  • Only on money bills
  • Supreme Court declared this unconstitutional in
    1997

Do Presidents Veto Many Bills?
58
PRESIDENTIAL VETOES AND OVERRIDES
59
PRESIDENTIAL VETOES AND OVERRIDES
60
PRESIDENTIAL VETOES AND OVERRIDES
Only one two term president did not veto a single
bill . . . . Who was he?
61
SIGNING STATEMENTS AND EXECUTIVE ORDERS
  • Signing Statement (do not have the force of law)
  • When the president signs a bill into law, he may
    attach a statement which indicates how the
    executive branch wants the bureaucracy to
    interpret the law.
  • Most often rhetorical but sometimes contrary to
    congressional intent
  • Executive Order (they have the force of law but
    can be overturned by subsequent administrations
  • Proclamation ceremonial
  • National Security Directive and Presidential
    Decision Directive deal with national security
    and defense matters
  • Emancipation Proclamation
  • Integration of the Armed Forces

62
of Significant Executive Orders
Louisiana Purchase Emancipation
Proclamation Japanese Internment Desegregation
of the Military Initiation of Affirmative
Action Creation of the Peace Corp Creation of
the EPA
63
OPEN CLOSED POLITICS
Open
Closed
  • State of the Union Message
  • Special Message
  • Veto Power
  • Press Conferences
  • Personal Contact
  • Patronage
  • Pork Barrel

Presidential power is the power to persuade
64
State of the Union
The president shall from time to time give to
the Congress information on the State of the
Union . . . .
Article II, Section 3, Clause 1
1790-1934 Known as the Annual Message 1st
Radio Broadcast Coolidge, 1923 1st Television
Message Truman, 1947 The Longest Taft, 1910
(27,651 words) The Shortest Washington, 1790
(1,089 words)
65
PRESIDENTIAL SPEECHES
In Thousands
Obama
66
PRESS CONFERENCES
President
Average Per Month
John Kennedy (1961-63)
1.9
Lyndon Johnson (1963-69)
2.2
Richard Nixon (1969-74)
0.6
Gerald Ford (1974-77)
1.3
Jimmy Carter (1977-81)
1.2
Ronald Reagan (1981-89)
0.5
George H. W.Bush (1989-93)
2.9
Bill Clinton (1993-01)
2.0
G.W. Bush (2001-08)
2.2
Obama (2009-12)
1.9
Press Conference

67
COMMANDER IN CHIEF
  • Lincolnian View -- an expansive view of
    presidential authority
  • Wilsonian-FDR View -- an executive- legislative
    partnership in war leadership statutes passed
    giving broad powers to the president

68
COMMANDER IN CHIEF
  • The president is the ultimate decision maker in
    military matters
  • Trumans decision to drop the atomic bomb
  • Nixons invasion of Cambodia
  • Reagan sent troops to Lebanon and to Grenada
  • Clinton sent troops to Haiti and to Bosnia
  • Obama sent special forces to Pakistan to
    assassinate Osama bin Laden

69
PARTY LEADER
  • The President is deprived of the advantage of a
    strong party organization that other heads of
    government enjoy
  • Therefore, Presidents are heavily dependent on
    their own personal skills

70
State Party Committees
County Party Committees
Municipal Party Committees
Precinct Party Committees
Private Clubs and Organizations
71
CHIEF DIPLOMAT
  • The Two Presidencies Thesis
  • Receive Ambassadors
  • Summit Conferences

72
CHIEF DIPLOMAT
  • Treaties and Executive Agreements
  • Emergency Powers to be used during time of crisis
    (Inherent Powers)
  • Lincoln suspended civil liberties at the start of
    the Civil War
  • Lincoln called state militias into national
    service
  • Truman seized the steel mills during the Korean
    War to prevent a strike (overturned by the
    Supreme Court)

73
Treaties and Executive Agreements
Period of Treaties of Ex. Agreements
Johnson, 64-68 67 1,083
Nixon, 69-74 93 1,317
Ford, 75-76 26 666
Carter, 77-80 79 1,476
Reagan, 81-88 125 2,840
Bush, 89-92 67 1,350
Clinton, 93-00 209 2,048
Bush, 01-08 147 1,990
Obama, 09-11 11 611
74
DOMESTIC PROVISIONS
  • . . . he shall take care that the laws be
    faithfully executed . . . . (Art. II, sec. 3)
  • In re Neagle
  • Inherent Executive Powers
  • Presidents have assumed inherent powers (not
    specifically mentioned in the Constitution).
  • Jeffersons purchase of Louisiana
  • Bushs suspension of civil liberties of foreign
    nationals held in military prison at Guantanamo
    Bay

75
DOMESTIC PROVISIONS
  • . . . and he shall have power to grant
    reprieves and pardons for offenses against the
    United States, except in cases of impeachment.
    (Art. II, sec. 2)
  • -- amnesty (blanket pardon)
  • -- Andrew Johnson gave amnesty to all
  • former Confederate soldiers
  • -- Jimmy Carter gave amnesty to Vietnam
  • era draft resisters

76
PRESIDENTIAL PARDONS
  • Can a pardon be rejected?
  • -- if you accept a pardon that is an admission
    of guilt
  • When does a president give most of their pardons?

77
PRESIDENTIAL PARDONS
Per Year
78
PUBLIC LEADER
With public sentiment, nothing can fail without
it nothing can succeed. Abraham Lincoln
  • Presidents are news . . . Even when they do
    nothing
  • Presidents keep their eyes on public opinion
    polls
  • Trial Balloon

79
IS IT TOO MUCH FOR ONE PERSON?
  • The responsibilities are awesome
  • There is no vacation
  • The remuneration is poor

80
IS IT TOO MUCH FOR ONE PERSON?
  • The president fulfills two roles that, in other
    nations, are performed by two different people
  • Head of Government
  • Chief of State

The office of President is such a bastardized
thing, half royalty and half democracy, that
nobody knows whether to genuflect or spit.

Jimmy Breslin
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