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Hail to the Chief

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Title: Presidential Powers Author: Nikki Lewis Last modified by: Allison S. Konter Created Date: 11/15/2004 11:14:36 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hail to the Chief


1
Hail to the Chief
The Power of the American Presidency
2
Demographic Characteristics of U.S. Presidents
  • 69 politicians
  • 62 lawyers
  • gt50 from the top 3 wealth and social class
  • 0.5 born into poverty
  • 69 elected from large states
  • 100 male
  • Almost 100 Caucasian
  • 97 Protestant
  • 82 of British ancestry
  • 77 college educated

3
Fortunate Son Recorded by Creedence Clearwater
Revival (1969)
  • Some folks are born silver spoon in hand,
  • Lord, dont they help themselves, oh.
  • But when the taxman comes to the door,
  • Lord, the house looks like a rummage sale, yes,
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no
    millionaires son, son.
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no fortunate
    one, no.
  • Some folks are born made to wave the flag,
  • Ooh, theyre red, white and blue.
  • And when the band plays, Hail to the Chief,
  • Ooh, they point the cannon at you, lord,
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no senators
    son, son.
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no fortunate
    one, no.

4
Fortunate SonRecorded by Creedence Clearwater
Revival (1969)
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no military
    son, son.
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no fortunate
    one, one.
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no fortunate
    son, son.
  • It aint me, it aint me, I aint no fortunate
    son, no, no, no.
  • Some folks inherit star spangled eyes,
  • Ooh, they send you down to war, lord,
  • And when you ask them, How much should we give?
  • Ooh, they only answer more! more! more! yo,

5
Constitutional Qualifications
  • Must be at least 35 years old
  • Must have lived in the United States for 14 years
  • Must be a natural born citizen

6
Presidential Benefits
  • 400,000 tax-free salary
  • 50,000/year expense account
  • 100,000/year travel expenses
  • The White House
  • Secret Service protection
  • Camp David country estate
  • Air Force One personal airplane
  • Staff of 400-500

Christmas at the White House, 2004
7
During the HW check
  • Turn to the Constitution in your book
  • Turn to Article 2
  • Make a list of the expressed powers of the
    President
  • Hint The expressed powers are those that are
    WRITTEN in the Constitution

8
Presidential Powers
  • Formal Powers those that are found in the
    Constitution
  • Informal Powers powers that President has that
    are not found in the Constitution
  • Informal powers EXPAND the power of our Presidency

9
Presidential RolesExpressed Powers
10
Commander-in-Chief
  • Controls the nations armed forces
  • Army
  • Navy
  • Marines
  • Air Force

11
Commander-in-Chief
President Johnson decorates a soldier in
Vietnam, October, 1966
President Bush aboard U.S.S. Lincoln, May, 2003
12
Chief Executive
  • Faithfully execute the laws
  • The President takes on this role when
  • He carries out laws
  • He runs the government

13
Chief Executive
President Bush holds cabinet meeting in October,
2005
President Clinton with Janet Reno, the first
female Attorney General, February, 1993
14
Chief Agenda Setter
  • Has public policy goals and works with Congress
    to see those policies get passed
  • Creates a legislative agenda and works with
    Congress to create laws that address those goals

15
Chief Agenda Setter
President Clinton delivers the State of the Union
Address, 1997
President Roosevelt signs into law the Social
Security Act, 1935
16
Chief Diplomat
  • Creates and manages Americas foreign policy
  • Negotiates with foreign nations
  • Appoints ministers and ambassadors (expressed)

17
Chief Diplomat
President Barack Obama visited China in 2009 to
discuss Americas economic relationship with
China.
President Richard Nixon visited China in 1972.
His visit was a symbol of the effort to improve
Americas relationship with China during the Cold
War.
18
Presidential RolesImplied Powers
19
Chief of State
  • Symbolizes the people of the United States
  • Ceremonial Role
  • Receives ambassadors (expressed)

20
Chief of State
Queen Elizabeth and President Reagan, 1983
President Kennedy speaks at Berlin Wall, 1963
21
Party Leader
  • Represents his political party key figure for
    the political party
  • Helps other party members get elected to office
  • Relies on his political party to move his
    legislative agenda through Congress

22
Party leader
President Reagan Vice-President Bush accepting
their partys nomination in 1980
23
Representative of the Nation
  • Moral representative of the people of the United
    States
  • Moral persuader
  • Works with and represents the many different
    interests of the people in the United States

24
Representative of the Nation
President Obama gave a speech on education
directed at students in the United States. This
speech urged students to take advantage of
education opportunities in the U.S.
25
Crisis Manager
  • The President deals with events that effect the
    general public
  • These events threaten the general public, catch
    people by surprise, and there is little reaction
    time

26
Crisis Manager
President Bush at Ground Zero after 9-11
Vice-President Johnson sworn in aboard Air Force
One after President Kennedys assassination, 1963
27
Formal Powers of the President
  • Constitutional or enumerated powers of the
    presidency
  • Found primarily in Article II of the Constitution

28
Formal Powers Commander-in-Chief
  • Commander in Chief of the Army Navy
  • Commander in Chief of the state militias (now the
    National Guard)
  • Commission all officers

29
Formal Powers Chief Executive
  • Faithfully execute the laws
  • Require the opinion of heads of executive
    departments
  • Grant pardons for federal offenses except for
    cases of impeachment
  • Nominate judges of the Supreme Court and all
    other officers of the U.S. with consent of the
    Senate
  • Fill vacancies that may happen during recess of
    the Senate

30
Formal Powers Foreign Affairs
  • Appoint ambassadors, ministers and consuls
  • Make treaties subject to Senate confirmation
  • Receive ambassadors

31
Formal Powers Chief Legislator
  • Give State of the Union address to Congress
  • Recommend measures to the Congress
  • Upon extraordinary occasions convene both
    houses of Congress

32
Formal Powers Chief Legislator (cont.)
  • Presidential Veto
  • Veto Message within 10 days of passing the House
    of origin
  • Pocket Veto - President does not sign within 10
    days
  • Congress can override with 2/3 majority from both
    Houses
  • Veto Politics
  • Congressional override is difficult (only 4)
  • Threat of veto can cause Congress to make changes
    in legislation

33
Informal Powers
  • Those powers not explicitly written in the
    Constitution
  • Similar to necessary and proper powers of
    Congress
  • In the modern era (since 1933), the Presidents
    informal powers may be significantly more
    powerful than his formal powers

34
Executive Orders
  • Orders issued by the President that carry the
    force of law
  • Clintons Dont ask dont tell gays in the
    military policy
  • FDRs internment of Japanese Americans
  • GWB trying suspected terrorists in military
    tribunals

Notice for Japanese relocation, 1942
35
Executive Agreements
  • International agreements, usually related to
    trade, made by a president that has the force of
    a treaty does NOT need Senate approval
  • Jeffersons purchase of Louisiana in 1803
  • GWB announced cuts in the nuclear arsenal, but
    not in a treaty usually trade agreements between
  • US and other nations

36
Executive Privilege
  • Claim by a president that he has the right to
    decide that the national interest will be better
    served if certain information is withheld from
    the public, including the Courts and Congress
  • United States v. Nixon (1973) presidents do NOT
    have unqualified executive privilege (Nixon
    Watergate tapes)

37
Questions for Discussion
  • Why are informal powers more important than
    formal powers, particularly to modern presidents?
  • Identify several advantages and disadvantages of
    the use of the presidents informal powers.
  • Has the use and perhaps abuse of the informal
    powers created an Imperial Presidency? Defend
    your answer.

38
Presidential Superpowers
  • You are to create a Presidential Superhero that
    represents all of the different roles that the
    President plays in our government. You have 2
    different options
  • Create a superhero and weapons/powers that
    reflect the different roles of the President
  • Create a story by making a comic strip that tells
    a story of the Presidential superhero using all
    of his powers.

39
Presidential Quotations
40
President Harry S. Truman
  • "I sit here all day trying to persuade people to
    do the things they ought to have the sense to do
    without my persuading them. That's all the powers
    of the President amount to."

Truman, 33rd President, 1945-53
41
President John F. Kennedy
  • No easy problem ever comes to the President of
    the United States. If they are easy to solve,
    somebody else has solved them.

President Kennedys nationally televised address
during the Cuban Missile Crisis, October, 1962
42
President Lyndon B. Johnson
  • The presidency has made every man who occupied
    it, no matter how small, bigger than he was and
    no matter how big, not big enough for its
    demands.

President Johnson, 36th President, 1963-69
43
President Richard M. Nixon
  • "Under the doctrine of the separation of powers,
    the manner in which the president personally
    exercises his assigned executive powers is not
    subject to questioning by another branch of
    government."

In the aftermath of the Watergate scandal,
President Nixon departs the White House after his
resignation, Aug., 1974
44
President George W. Bush
  • To those of you who received honors, awards, and
    distinctions, I say 'Well done.' And to the C
    students, I say 'You, too, can be president of
    the United States.'
  • President George W. Bush, speaking at Yale
    University's 300th commencement ceremony

President Bush, 43rd President, 2001-present
45
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