Title: 7.1-The President and Vice President
17.1-The President and Vice President
2The Office of the President
- The President heads the Executive Branch and is
described in Article II of the Constitution
3The Office of the President
- The US Constitution lists three rules about who
can become president - 1. The person must be at least 35 years old
- 2. A native-born American citizen
- 3. A resident of the US for at least 14 years
4Presidential Elections
- Presidential elections take place every 4 years
5Presidential Elections
- The Constitution does not provide for direct
popular election of the president it set up an
indirect method of election called the Electoral
College
6Presidential Elections
- The Constitution says each state shall appoint
electors who then vote for one of the major
candidates
Washington D.C.- 3 electors casting ballots in
the 2008 election
7Presidential Elections
- The Twentieth Amendment (1933) shortens the time
between an election and inauguration day moved
from March 4th to January 20th
8Electoral College System
- Each state has as many electoral votes as the
total of its US Senators and Representatives
(Washington, DC has 3 electoral votes)
Representation by Population
Equal Representation- 2
9Electoral College System
- The Electoral College includes 538 electors it
is mostly a winner-take-all system if a
candidate wins the popular vote by a tiny
majority, that candidate gets all the states
electoral votes
10Electoral College System
- To be elected president a candidate must receive
at least half of the 538 electoral votes, a
candidate needs 270 votes to win
11Electoral College System
- If no candidate receives a majority in the
electoral college the House of Representatives
elects the winner - The formal election by the Electoral College
doesnt take place until December when electors
meet in each state capital to cast their ballots
12Term of Office
- Presidents serve 4 year terms
- George Washington served two four year terms and
refused to run again many later Presidents
followed his example, this is known as a precedent
13Term of Office
- No president served more than two terms until
1940, when Franklin D. Roosevelt ran for and won
a third term he won a 4th term in 1944
14Term of Office
- The 22nd Amendment (1951) limits each President
to 2 elected terms in office, or a maximum of ten
years if his presidency began during another
presidents term
15Salary and Benefits
- The president receives a salary of 400,000 per
year plus money for expenses and travel he lives
and works in the White House
16Salary and Benefits
- He also has the use of Camp David, an estate in
Maryland 60 miles north of Washington, D.C. it
serves as a retreat and a place to host foreign
leaders
17Salary and Benefits
- When presidents travel, they command a fleet of
special cars, helicopters, and airplanes for
long trips the president uses Air Force One a
specially equipped jet
18The Vice President
- The Vice President is elected with the President
by the Electoral College the qualifications are
the same as those for the President
19The Vice President
- Article I states the VP shall preside over the
Senate and vote in case of a tie
Since 1789, 244 tie-breaking votes have been
cast. http//www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/
four_column_table/Tie_Votes.htm
20The Vice President
- If the president dies, is removed from office,
falls seriously ill, or resigns, the Vice
President becomes president
21The Vice President
- The Twelfth Amendment (1804) states that electors
should cast separate ballots for President and
Vice President
Election of 1796- John Adams (Federalist) was
President, Thomas Jefferson (Democratic-Republican
) was VP
22Presidential Succession
- In 1841 William Henry Harrison became the first
President to die in office, his VP John Tyler
became President
23Presidential Succession
- In 1947 Congress passed the Presidential
Succession Act which indicates the line of
succession after the VP - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_preside
ntial_line_of_succession
24Presidential Succession
- According to this law, if the president and VP
die or leave office, the Speaker of the House
becomes president - Next in line is the President Pro Tempore of the
Senate, then the Secretary of State and other
members of the cabinet
25Presidential Succession
- The 25th Amendment (1967) says if the president
dies or leaves office the VP becomes president,
he then chooses another VP who must be approved
by the Senate and House of Representatives
Joint Resolution proposing the 25th Amendment
2625th Amendment
- Gerald Rudolph Ford, Jr. (born July 14, 1913
December 26, 2006) was the thirty-eighth
President of the United States, serving from 1974
to 1977, and the fortieth Vice President of the
United States serving from 1973 to 1974. He was
the first person appointed to the vice-presidency
under the terms of the 25th Amendment, and became
President upon Richard Nixon's resignation on
August 9, 1974.
27Presidential Succession
- It also gives the VP a role in determining
whether a president is disabled and unable to do
the job, if that occurs the VP serves as acting
President until the President is ready to go back
to work
1985- George H. Bush was acting President while
Reagan underwent surgery 2002 and 2007- Dick
Cheney was acting President while Bush underwent
surgery