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POL 101: U.S. Government

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Title: No Slide Title Author: kevin lasher Last modified by: Kevin J. Lasher Created Date: 11/2/1999 4:18:31 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: POL 101: U.S. Government


1
POL 101 U.S. Government
Presentation by Dr. Kevin Lasher
2
Major Functions of Congress
  • Running for re-election
  • Representation
  • Constituency Service
  • Policy-making and law-making
  • Oversight

3
BILL INTRODUCED
SUB- COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
RULESCOMMITTEE
FLOOR VOTE
PRESIDENT SIGNS/VETOES
FINAL FLOOR VOTE
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
HOUSE
OVERRIDE VETO with 2/3 VOTE
4
BILL INTRODUCED
SUB- COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
FLOOR VOTE
PRESIDENT SIGNS/VETOES
FINAL FLOOR VOTE
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
SENATE
OVERRIDE VETO with 2/3 VOTE
5
BILL INTRODUCED
SUB- COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
COMMITTEE
FLOOR VOTE
RULESCOMMITTEE (House Only)
PRESIDENT SIGNS/VETOES
FINAL FLOOR VOTE
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
OVERRIDE VETO with 2/3 VOTE
6
Which branch should dominate?
?
Congress
President
7
Periods of Congressional-Presidential Relations
  • 1787-1932 Congressional Dominance
  • 1932-1974 Presidential Dominance
  • 1974-present Congressional-Presidential
    Balance

8
Congressional Dominance, 1787-1932
  • Founders intended Congress to be primary branch
  • National government was limited in scope during
    much of this period (Madisonian federalism)
  • National govt fight wars, administer
    territories, diplomacy, few domestic programs
  • Strong Presidents in this era Jackson, Lincoln,
    T. Roosevelt, Wilson

9
Andrew Jackson, 1829-1837
Abraham Lincoln, 1861-1865
Woodrow Wilson, 1913-1921
Theodore Roosevelt, 1901-1909
10
Presidential Dominance, 1932-1974
11
Presidential Dominance, 1932-1974
  • Constitution does not change but circumstances
    change
  • Expansion of presidency along with the expansion
    of the power of the national government
  • Eventually came a backlash to imperial
    presidencies of Johnson and Nixon
  • Congress begins to reassert its authority at end
    of this period

12
Presidential Dominance, 1932-1974
  • WHY?
  • Executive branch management of US economy
  • US as world superpower changes importance of
    foreign policy and urgency of central control
  • New roles for federal government civil rights,
    environment, education, others
  • New media focuses on single individual
  • No new constitutional powers

13
Congl-Presl Balance, 1974-present
Richard Nixon
Lyndon Johnson
Imperial Presidents
14
Congl-Presl Balance, 1974-present
  • Congress begins to reassert its authority after
    Vietnam and Watergate presidency had become too
    powerful
  • Ford and Carter as weak/failed Presidents
  • Rough balance between legislature and executive
    not absolute equality
  • Reagan and Bush 43 much more powerful for a part
    of their presidencies
  • Presidents more powerful on foreign policy

15
Congl-Presl Balance, 1974-present
  • What is a powerful President?

16
Presidential Powers Modern Powers
  • Power over foreign policy
  • Power through bureaucracy
  • Power over legislation
  • Power through leadership/persuasion
  • Power through party

17
The End
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