Title: The Executive Branch
1The Executive Branch
2Great Expectations
- Consider these statements
- The president must live up to the expectations of
the American people to ensure peace, prosperity,
and security. - Americans want to believe in a powerful president
but at the same time do not like a concentration
of power.
3Qualifications and Terms
- According to the United States Constitution
- The president must be
- 35 years old
- Natural-born citizen
- 14 years as resident
- The presidents terms of office are
- 4 years
- May serve 2 terms or 10 years
4From Title 8 of the U.S. Code Section 1401A
natural-born citizen is
- Anyone born inside the US
- Any Indian or Eskimo born in the US provided
being a citizen of the US does not impair the
person's status as a citizen of the tribe - Anyone born outside the US, both of whose parents
are citizens of the US as long as one parent has
lived in the US - Any one born outside the US, if one parent is a
citizen and lived in the US for at least one year
and other parent is a US National - Any one born in a US possession, if one parent is
a citizen and lived in the US for a least one
year - Any one found in the US under the age of five,
whose parentage cannot be determined, as long as
proof of non-citizenship is not provided by age
21 - Any one born outside the US, if one parent is an
alien and as long as the other parent is a
citizen of the US who lived in the US for at
least five years (with military and diplomatic
service included in this time) - A final, historical condition a person born
before 5/24/1934 of an alien father and a U.S.
citizen mother who has lived in the U.S
5Constitutional Powers
- The Constitution says little about presidential
power. - Presidents share executive, legislative, and
judicial power with other branches of government.
- The framers placed checks on powers they believed
to be most dangerous while protecting the general
spheres of authority from encroachment.
6The Expansion of Presidential Power Good or Bad
for the Country??
- Today presidential power is greater than the
Constitution suggests. - Many presidents enlarged the power of the
presidency by expanding the presidents
responsibilities and political resources. - In the 1950s and 1960s scholars tended to favor
the idea of a strong presidency. - However, after the abuses of power during the
Vietnam War and Watergate, scholars argued that
the presidency had become too powerful for the
good of the nation.
7Formal Presidential Powers Found in Constitution
(Article II)
- Executing (carrying out) laws veto/pocket veto
laws - Commander-in-chief
- Negotiates/makes/signs treaties (NOT ratify!)
- Appoint federal justices and judges (NOT
confirm!) - Appoints ambassadors and foreign policy officials
(NOT confirm!) - Fill vacant government posts when the Senate is
in recess - May pardon individuals
- Recognizes nations
- Receives ambassadors and other heads of state
- May convene and/or adjourn both houses of
Congress - Must give message to Congress from time to time
- Has become the State of the Union Address
8Informal Presidential PowersNot in found in the
U.S. Constitution
- Crisis manager
- Has access to expert knowledge and expertise
- De facto political party leader
- Recognized as global leader
- Conducts foreign policy initiative
- Meets with world leaders
- Builds coalitions with international community
- FYIthis is not a finite list! There are many
more!
- The First Citizen
- National Spokesman
- Makes executive orders and agreements
- Does not have to be approved by Congress!
- Access to media
- Sets domestic/economic agenda
- Sets foreign policy agenda
- Helps to set and guide legislative agenda
9In Other Words the President is the.
- Chief Executive
- Commander in Chief
- Chief Diplomat
- Chief Legislator
10Presidential Powers
- Chief Executive
- Runs the Government and is officially in charge
of the 3 million-plus executive branch employees - Appoints department heads, federal judges,
ambassadors - Pardons individuals of concern (usually at end of
term) - Commander in Chief
- In charge of armed forces
- May send troops without declaration of war after
seeking approval from Congress - Chief Diplomat
- Deals with foreign governments
- Makes executive agreements with foreign heads of
state - Signs treaties with advice and consent of the
Senate - Chief Legislator
- In charge of economic management
- Makes certain that laws are carried out- shall
Take Care that the laws be carefully carried
out (Take Care Clause) - Sets agenda and budget with approval from
Congress - The Buck stops here- Harry Truman
- Can veto or pocket veto legislation
11The Chief Executive
- One of the presidents most important roles is
presiding over the administration of government. - One of the resources for controlling this
bureaucracy is the presidential power to appoint
top-level administrators. - Presidents have recently taken more interest in
the regulations issued by agencies, thus
centralizing decision-making in the White House.
12Commander in Chief
- The framers made the president the commander in
chief of the armed forces. - As such he is the commander in chief of more than
1.5 million uniformed men and women.
13Chief Diplomat
- The Constitution allocates certain national
security powers to the president. - He alone extends diplomatic recognition,
negotiates treaties, and negotiates executive
agreements with heads of foreign governments. - The president must try to lead Americas allies
on matters of economics and defense.
14Chief Legislator
- The president is the nations key agenda builder
what the administration wants strongly influences
the parameters of debate. - In general, presidential legislative skill must
compete with other factors that affect
congressional voting behavior. - Presidential legislative skills include
bargaining, making personal appeals, consulting
with Congress, setting priorities, exploiting
honeymoon periods, and structuring
congressional votes.
15Presidential Approval
- The higher the president stands in the polls, the
easier it is to persuade others to support
presidential initiatives. - The presidents standing in the polls is
monitored closely. - Presidents frequently do not have widespread
support. - Public approval of the president sometimes reacts
to rally events and takes sudden jumps. - The criteria on which the public evaluates
presidents are open to many interpretations.
16Presidential Approval
- Presidential approval is the product of many
factors including the predisposition of many
people to support the president, political party
identification, and honeymoon periods. - Changes in approval levels appear to reflect the
publics evaluation of how the president is
handling policy. - Citizens seem to focus on the presidents efforts
and stands on issues rather than on personality
or simply how presidential policies affect them.
17Checks and Balances to Know
- Presidential Check on Legislative Branch
- Presidential Check on Judicial Branches
- Congressional Checks on Executive Branch
- Judicial Checks on Executive Branch
181. Legislative Branch Checks over Judicial Branch
6. Judicial Checks over Executive Branch
2. Legislative Branch Checks over Executive
Branch
5. Judicial Branch Checks over Legislative Branch
4. Executive Branch Checks over Judicial Branch
3. Executive Branch Checks over Legislative
Branch
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20Checks and Balances to Know
- Executive Check on Legislative Branch
- Veto
- May call special sessions or recommend
legislation/budget - Executive Check on Judicial Branch
- Nominations of Federal Judges
- Legislative Checks on Executive Branch
- Refusal to pass a presidential bill and/or
presidential budget - Overriding a Veto
- Impeachment (House) and Conviction (Senate)
- Refusal to approve Presidential appointees
(Senate) - Refusal to ratify treaty (Senate)
- May also conduct investigations
- (Special Counselors Ken Starr and Patrick
Fitzsimmons) - Judicial Checks on Executive Branch
- Declaration of presidential acts as
unconstitutional - Judicial Review
21Congress and the President
- In recent years, Congress has challenged
presidents on all fronts. - Congresss role has typically been overseeing of
the executive rather than initiation of policy. - Congress can refuse to provide authorizations and
appropriations for presidential actions.
22Congress and the President
- Just whos in Charge of Domestic Affairs and
Foreign Affairs?? - Congress is in charge of the budget (has purse
strings) and appropriations therefore can be seen
as having the upper hand in domestic matters - Constitutional Check The president must sign
budget bills into law
- The president is supreme in the area of national
security matters and foreign affairs - Congress DOES have a central constitutional role
in making national security policy but is less
involved in national security policy than in
domestic policy
2322nd Amendment
- Limits presidents to 2 terms or 10 years
- No person shall be elected to the office of the
President more than twice, and no person who has
held the office of President, or acted as
President, for more than two years of a term to
which some other person was elected President
shall be elected to the office of the President
more than once." - Criticism sometimes made of the 22nd Amendment
is that it can seriously erode a second-term
president's power and influence. - Difficulties have been faced by every President
during their second terms since the amendment's
ratification. - Such a president is often referred to as a lame
duck.
24Lame Duck
- A lame duck is an elected official who loses
political power or is no longer responsive to the
electorate as a result of - a term limit which keeps him from running for
that particular office again, - losing an election
- the elimination of the official's office
- Lame duck politicians continue to hold office
until the end of the their term.
2525th AmendmentPresidential Succession and
Disability
- In case of death or resignation
- Vice-President takes over
- Speaker of House
- President Pro Tempore of the Senate
- Cabinet secretaries in order of creation
- In case of disability
- President signs away authority to VP
- If VP and majority of cabinet find President
unfit they can take power
26Also in 25th Amendment
- Vice-Presidential Succession and Disability
- President nominates new candidate
- Nominee confirmed by majority of both houses
- Nixon selected Senator Gerald Ford as the Vice-
President - President Ford selected Nelson Rockefeller as his
Vice-President
27The Vice-Presidency
- The Vice President must be a natural-born citizen
of the United States, at least thirty-five years
of age and a resident of the U.S. for 14 years. - The Constitution also forbids the vice president
from being from the same state as the president - The Twelfth Amendment to the United States
Constitution requires vice presidents to meet the
same requirements as presidents. - For example the 22nd amendment limits presidents
to being elected to only two terms, so a former
2-term president CAN NOT be elected as
vice-president.
28The really dumb Original Plan
- Under the original terms of the Constitution, the
members of the U.S. Electoral College voted only
for office of President rather than for both
President and Vice President. - The person receiving the greatest number of votes
(provided that such a number was a majority of
electors) would be President, while the
individual who was in second place became Vice
President.
29And now the Really dumb results
- In the election of 1796 Federalist John Adams
came in first, and Democratic-Republican Thomas
Jefferson came second. - Thus, the President and Vice President were from
different parties. - An even greater problem occurred in the election
of 1800, when Democratic-Republicans Jefferson
and Aaron Burr tied the vote. - While it was intended that Jefferson was the
Presidential contender and Burr was the Vice
Presidential one, the electors did not and could
not differentiate between the two under the
system of the time. - After 35 unsuccessful votes in the U.S. House of
Representatives, Thomas Jefferson finally won on
the 36th ballot and Burr became Vice President.
30The 12th Amendment
- The tumultuous affair led to the adoption of the
Twelfth amendment in 1804, which directed the
electors to use separate ballots to vote for the
President and Vice President. - While this solved the problem at hand, it
ultimately had the effect of lowering the
prestige of the Vice Presidency, as the Vice
President was no longer the second choice for
President.
31Selecting a Vice President
- Presidents have used several techniques when
selecting their running mates - Historically, they have usually chosen someone
who balances the ticket - Region
- Age
- Religion
- Charisma
- Experience
32Selecting a Vice President
- Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush went
against this tradition - Instead they have selected a running mate with
their own political experience and knowledge - Someone who could actually BE the president if
called upon - For example, Al Gore is from a southern state
like Clinton and therefore did not balance the
ticket in 1992 and 1996 - On the same note, VP Cheney is actually from
Texas just like President Bush, but Bush selected
him anyway (He had to establish residency in
Wyoming to qualify)
33The Role of the President in Law Making
- He can take a bill that has passed both side of
Congress and - Sign it into law
- Let it become law (if Congress is in session)
- Veto it
- Pocket veto (Kills bill if Congress is not in
session) - Congress can override presidential veto with a
2/3 vote of each house
34Line Item Veto
- The 1996 Line-Item Veto Law allowed the president
to pencil-out specific spending items approved by
the Congress. - It was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme
Court 1998, ruling that Congress did not have the
authority to hand that power to the president. - The 6-3 ruling said that the Constitution gives a
president only two choices either sign
legislation or send it back to Congress.
35Alexander Hamiltons View of the Presidency
- Hamilton proposed a president who would be
elected for life, "on good behavior." - That idea went nowhere as most delegate were
fearful of a powerful monarch-like executive - Hamilton vigorously defended the strong-executive
plan in the essays that became known as The
Federalist Papers. (Federalist 70) - "Energy in the executive is a leading character
in the definition of good government,"
3619th Century Presidents
- Dominated by Congress
- Exceptions
- Washington
- Gave Presidency Legitimacy
- Jackson
- First President to expand the powers of the
Presidency - Lincoln
- Set the foundations for the modern Presidency
3720th Century Presidents
- Extremely powerful
- Began with TR and FDR
- What Caused This?
- The Great Depression
- New Deal legislation
- The Cold War
- National Security issues
- The Media
- -More attention to president
- Weak Congresses
- -Infighting and partisanship
- Other ideas?
38Two Modern Views of the Presidency
- The Imperial presidency
- Rossiter and Schlesinger articles
- Can be defined, as the use (or misuse!) of
discretionary power by the Chief Executive - Categorized by the large staffs of most modern
presidents - Comparisons to the royal courts of Europe
- Emphasis on the executive branch replacing
Congress as the most powerful branch - Hamilton would have LOVED this!
- Also includes the decline in importance of the
cabinet
39Two Imperial Presidents
- Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan both pushed the
limits of the presidency - Both won huge 2nd term elections
- Congress took the back seat in power to both men
- Watergate ended this for Nixon, but Iran-Contra
had little effect on Reagans imperial presidency
40Examples of the Imperial Presidency
- Congress has ceded its budget-making authority to
the president. - Presidents make agreements with foreign nations
without congressional approval by substituting
executive agreements for treaties which required
the approval of the Senate. - The Commander-in-Chief role has also been
expanded even though Congress is empowered to
declare war. - Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
41Presidential Power Today
- Some of the most noteworthy presidents in the
past several decades century successfully
advocated substantial increases in the role of
the national government. - All seven of the presidents since Lyndon Johnson
have championed constraints on government and
limits on spending. - FYI
- It has been the president more often than
Congress who has said no to government growth.
42Presidents and the Press
- Presidents do not directly reach the American
people on a daily basis. - The press is the principal intermediary between
the president and the public, and relations with
the press are an important aspect of the
presidents efforts to lead public opinion. - Presidents and the press tend to be in conflict.
- The White House monitors the media closely and
tries to encourage the media to project a
positive image of the president.
43The Press Secretary
- The person who most often deals directly with the
press is the presidents press secretary and the
best-known interaction between the president and
the press is the presidential press conference. - Press conferences are not very useful means of
eliciting information. Most of the news coverage
of the White House involves the most visible
layer of presidents personal and official
activities rather than in the substance of
policies.
President Obamas Press Secretary-Jay Carney
President Bartletts Press Secretary- C.J. Cregg
?
44The Affects of Watergate
- Watergate brought a temporary halt to the
"imperial presidency" and the growth of the
institutional presidential power - Over the president's veto, Congress enacted the
War Powers Act (1973), which required future
presidents to obtain authorization from Congress
to engage U.S. forces in foreign combat for more
than 90 days. - Under the Act, a president who orders troops into
action abroad must report the reason for this
action to Congress within 48 hours.
45Two Modern Views of the Presidency
- 2. The Institutional presidency (Neustadt
article) - The role of each new president in organizing and
managing the Executive Branch - Includes the
- Executive Office of the President (EOP)
- The White House Staff
- Chief of Staff as gatekeeper
- The Cabinet
- Most modern presidents have attempted to change
the Executive Office of the Presidency by adding
new offices and employees OR deleting or firing
employees
46The Chief of Staff
- The White House Chief of Staff is the highest
ranking member of the Executive Office of the
President of the United States and a senior aide
to the President. - The office-holder has been dubbed "The
Second-Most Powerful Man or Woman in Washington"
due to the nature of the job. - Most White House Chiefs of Staff are former
politicians, and many continue their political
careers in other senior roles.
President Obamas Chief of Staff - Jack Lew
President Bartletts Chief of Staff- Leo McGarry
?
47Parts of the Executive Branch
President
Independent Agencies, Boards Commissions
Executive Office of the President Includes White
House Staff
The Executive Branch Departments AKA The Cabinet
48White House Structures
3. Ad Hoc No real format. Access is limited or
granted by president or top aids on a case by
case or need to know manner.
49Important Acts and Cases
- Federalist 70
- Budget Reform Act of 1974
- Tonkin Gulf Resolution
- War Powers Act
- NAFTA
- Panama Canal Treaty
- US v Nixon
50The War Powers Act
- Presidents have customarily made short-term
military commitments of troops or naval vessels
that have occasionally become long-term (Korea
and Vietnam). - The War Powers Resolution (1973) required
presidents to consult with Congress before using
military force and mandated the withdrawal of
forces after sixty days unless Congress declared
war or granted an extension. - The War Powers Resolution has not been a success
and may be considered a legislative veto and a
violation of the doctrine of separation of
powers. - Congress has found it difficult to challenge the
president.
51United States v Nixon (1974)
- During the height of the Watergate scandal
President Nixon asserted that he was immune from
a subpoena for his personal White House tapes
claiming "executive privilege. - The right to withhold information from other
government branches to preserve confidential
communications within the executive branch or to
secure the national interest.
52Importance of Case
- The Court said No!!
- It did grant that there was a limited executive
privilege in areas of military or diplomatic
affairs, but disagreed with Mr. Nixon claiming
"the fundamental demands of due process of law in
the fair administration of justice." - Therefore, the president must obey the subpoena
and produce the tapes and documents. - Nixon resigned shortly after the release of the
tapes.
53The Electoral College Review
- The Electoral College is the assembly that
formally elects the President and Vice President - Our votes simply elect the electors that vote for
the President - Number of electoral votes
- 538 Total
- 270 Needed to get elected
54Electoral College (continued)
- Electoral votes are divided up by state
- Number of state electoral votes is equal to the
states number of House Representatives and
Senators - Exception
- Washington, DC gets 3 Votes
55Electors Review
- How selected?
- Varies with each state
- Usually selected by state parties or committees
- Who are they?
- Party loyalists
- Party leaders
- Friends of the candidate
56Contingency Election for President
- If one candidate does not win 270 votes, it goes
to the House of Representatives - Top three candidates receiving electoral votes
- Each state has one vote
- Need a majority of states to elect the President
57Contingency Election for Vice-President
- Goes to the Senate for a vote
- Two candidates with the most electoral vote
compete - Members vote as individuals rather than states.
58Electoral College Criticism
- Faithless Electors
- Electors may change their votes
- Some state laws do not allow this
- Winner take all system
- Gives big states an advantage
- Encourages fraud
- Enhances power of third party candidates to split
the vote (Greens and Nader in 2000)
59Electoral College Criticism (continued)
- All states get at least three electoral votes
- Gives small states more power relative to their
population - Uncertainty of the Winner Winning
- Winner of the popular vote does not equal winner
of the electoral vote - Contingency Election Procedures
- Deadlock in the House
- Increased power of third parties to control
election
60Virtues of the Electoral College
- It is a Proven System
- Makes Campaigns More Manageable
- Discourages Election Fraud
- Preserves Moderate Two-Party System
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