1 / 57

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Twelve. The Executive Branch. Introduction. What do you consider the most important qualification for the office of president?. Objectives. Students WILL……… Know: The difference between a prime minister and a president. What the qualifications are for President.

glynnis
Download Presentation

Chapter Twelve

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter Twelve The Executive Branch

  2. Introduction What do you consider the most important qualification for the office of president?

  3. Objectives • Students WILL……… • Know: • The difference between a prime minister and a president. • What the qualifications are for President. • The Presidents Terms and Salary. • What the provisions are for filling the presidency if a President can not perform his or her duties

  4. Did YOU Know? • Getting elected is expensive. For example, after the presidential election of 1996 it was revealed that both parties had raised many million of dollars in campaign funds from sources in other countries. Many members o congress argued that the laws governing campaign financing needed to be reformed. The McCain-Feingold bill, a reform measure, was introduced in the Senate in 1997.

  5. The Presidency • On one Hand: • One of the most powerful offices in the world. • Examples: • Kennedy and Johnson sent troops to Vietnam and Bush sent troops to Saudi Arabia. • Nixon posed wage and price controls. • Carter and Reagan appointed most of the federal judges on the bench today.

  6. The Presidency • On the other hand: • The president compared to a prime minister is weak. • Examples: • Carter signed a arms limitation treaty with the Soviets, but the senate would not ratify it. • Reagan was not allowed to test anti-satellite weapons and in 1986 congress rejected his budget. • Clintons health care plan was ignored. • No wonder people call the U.S president is a pitiful helpless giant.

  7. President vs. Prime Minister • Chosen by a political party and then elected by the people. • Presidents try to show they are outsiders of government. • Cabinet members are chosen from outside congress. • Presidents political party may not have majority in congress. • Chosen by the Legislature. • May or may not have a following. • Cabinet members are chosen from parliament. • Prime ministers party is always the majority.

  8. The Evolution of the Presidency • In 1787 the founding fathers had many concerns on where to go with the executive branch. • The delegates feared anarchy and a monarchy. • Some argued a plural national executive. • Hamilton argued in a five hour speech that he favored a elective monarchy. • They went with a single person president.

  9. Some Concerns • He has powers over militia. • He would be a tool of the senate. • Reelections

  10. Presidential Qualifications • Formal Qualifications: • Constitutional Requirements • (Article II Section 1) • 1. natural-born citizen • 2. at least 35 years old • 3. a resident of the U. S. for 14 years • Unwritten Qualifications • Experience

  11. Other Qualifications • Access to sources for raising election campaign money. • Usually hold moderate, political beliefs. • Similar backgrounds: • ethnic, economic, racial, and gender.

  12. Duties of the President • The president has enormous power and responsibility. • Duties: • Carries out laws/lawmaking power. • Commander in chief of the military. • Manages the defense budget of 290 billion dollars. • Appoints top officials • federal judges and ambassadors. • Meets with the heads of foreign governments.

  13. Chief of State The ceremonial head of the United States, the symbol of all the people of the nation. Chief Executive The executive power of the United States. Other Duties

  14. Other Duties……….. • Chief Administrator: Heading one of the largest govt. machines in the world. • Commander in chief: head of armed forces. • Chief Legislator: the main architect of its public policies. The president sets the shape of most congressional agendas. • State of the Union: a statement given by the President to the people and legislative branch describing what he wants done for the year. • Chief of Party: the acknowledge leader of the political party that controls the executive branch. • Chief Citizen: a model and representative of all citizens.

  15. President’s Term • The Twenty-second Amendment established term limits: • limited presidents to two-terms of four years. • This was due to Roosevelt • He served four terms in office. • 16 years • A president could serve in the Executive Office for 10 years. • How??????

  16. Salary • Congress determines: • $200,000 salary since 1969 • Taxable • 50,000 dollars a year for expenses. • Non taxable • 100,000 dollars for travel • Non taxable • Benefits: • Body guards • A personal plane • Free medical and dental • Live in the White House (132 rooms, swimming pool, bowling alley, theater, tennis courts. • Maids • Retirement: • 148,400 dollars a year. • Free office space, mail, and 96,000 dollars for staffing. • When president dies the spouse gets 20,000 dollars a year.

  17. Presidential Succession • The Twenty-fifth Amendment • Established the order of presidential succession. • Read page 217 (the 25th amendment) • Also explains what happens when the vice presidency is vacant. • (Vice president, Speaker of the House, President pro temporeof the Senate, Secretary of State, other cabinet members) • The Twenty-fifth Amendment: • Presidential Disability • In 1967 why was the Twenty-fifth Amendment added to the Constitution?

  18. Vice Presidency • Head of Senate.

  19. The Vice President’s Role Z Z Z Z Z Z • depends on what jobs the president assigns. • presidents before Eisenhower generally ignored vice president • recently have been given more responsibility. • Why ????????????

  20. Two Presidencies • Main Argument: • There is a split between the foreign affairs presidency and the domestic presidency • Wildavsky's Reasoning: • Foreign policy concerns drive out domestic policy Causes: • The situation since World War II • limited time and resources to spend on policy • the speed and importance of world affairs • The usual competition against the President is limited in the foreign policy arena: • Public depends on the President • Interest groups here are small and usually have a narrow focus • Congress defers to the President • the Military is weak in terms of policy issues • "Military-industrial complex" is focused on getting contracts, which is not the same as influencing policy • Dept. of State: follows the policies of the President

  21. Results • Results: • Presidents have weak record in domestic affairs: most advances/policies are incremental and build on existing policy • Presidents are strong in foreign affairs: they have the power to act, and room for discretion is large

  22. Electing the President The Electoral College System

  23. Did you knowDid you know In the presidential election of 1992, third-party candidate Ross Perot received 19.7 million popular votes. President George Bush received 39.1 million popular votes, and the winning candidate, Democrat Bill Clinton, received 44.9 million popular votes. The results in the electoral college vote, however, were very different. Ross Perot did not win a single electoral vote, while Clinton received 370 electoral votes and Bush, 168 electoral votes.

  24. Original System of Electing the President • Article II Section I established the electoral college. • Established that each state would elect representatives that would vote for the president and vice president. • Electors: • Those chosen to represent and then vote. • This vote was called the electoral vote. • No popular vote was cast back then.

  25. The Original System • Article II, Section 1: • Established • Most votes: President • Second-highest: Vice President.

  26. Discuss • What political problem could result from the vice president being the person with the second highest electoral vote?

  27. Impact of Political Parties • 1800s there was two parties: • Federalists and Democratic Republicans. • Each party would nominate its own presidential and vice president candidates. • Parties would also nominate the electors from the states that would cast their votes for the executive branch. • In 1800 the Democratic Republicans won a majority of the electoral positions. • Each elector cast a vote and it ended up in a tie between Jefferson and Burr.

  28. The Impact of Political Parties • The election of 1800 was decided by the House of Representatives. • To prevent a tie vote: • Twelfth Amendment: • provided that electors cast separate ballots for president and vice president. • Also provides that if no candidate receives a majority of the electoral votes, the house chooses from the candidates. • The Primary Process • Parties have primary elections to see who will run for each political party. • This creates more involvement from people. • Weeds out candidates

  29. The Electoral College Today • 538 electors • Each state has the same number of electors as they do Senators and House of Representatives combined. • To win the Presidency a candidate must win 270 electoral votes. • Presidency is usually announced the night of the popular vote,however the electors cast their vote the Monday following the second Wednesday in December.

  30. The Electoral College System Today • The College uses a winner-takes-all system (except Maine and Nebraska) • The Electoral College vote is cast in December.

  31. Electoral College Issues • Winner Take All • Critics say winner-take-all is unfair. • The losing candidates votes of a state does not really count towards the nations popular vote. • Those votes may have helped in a popular vote election.

  32. Third Party Candidates: • Third-party candidates prevent major party candidates from receiving majority.

  33. Election By the House • House of Reps. Decides on ties. • Each state gets to cast one vote • Small states have just as much power as the large states. • If the representatives cannot agree on a candidate they lose their votes.

  34. Ideas for Reform • List the ideas for reform.

  35. Arguments against the current system • Unequal weight of voters • Losing the popular vote • Focus on large swing states • Favors less populous states • Disadvantage for third parties

  36. Arguments for the current system • Requires a distribution of popular support to win the Presidency • Maintains the federal character of the nation • Enhances status of minority groups • Encourages stability through the two-party system • Isolation of election problems • Maintains separation of powers • Death or unsuitability of a candidate

  37. The Case for the Current Presidential Nominating Process • Main Argument: • Nelson defends the current nominating process (1985) against its critics • He argues that the process strengthens parties because they are forced to adapt to changes in the world and thereby stay relevant.

  38. Nelson's Reasoning • Nelson defends the nominating process in three areas: • 1) It strengthens parties • party organization becomes stronger by being forced to adapt: this makes parties institutionally stronger • 2) It facilitates the selection of skilled candidates • campaign skills are the same skills required to be an effective president: • (a) a strategic sense of the public's disposition; (b) a talent for the management of authority; (c) the ability to present ideas through rhetoric and symbolism; (d) mastery of bargaining, persuasion, and political gamesmanship

  39. 3) It legitimates the process in the eyes of the public • this legitimacy increases with time if the process is not changed • Nelson attacks those who claim that the nominating process has weakened the parties: • parties-in-government: split ticket voting (evidence of the decline of parties) predates the current nominating process • parties-in-the-electorate: general party decline predates the current process

  40. Homework I want to see an outline for your paper. Thesis Topic sentences Ect.

  41. The Cabinet

  42. Did YOU Know? • A liberal magazine opposed to Presidents Eisenhower's conservative politics also criticized his cabinet. It said the cabinet was made up of 8 millionaires and a plumber. In fact, the plumber was president of the plumbers union, and the millionaires were successful executives of well known businesses. Since then, of course, presidents have picked many wealthy cabinet members with business backgrounds.

  43. John Quincy Adams Secretary of State 1817 Martin Van Buren Secretary of State 1829 James Buchanan Secretary of State 1845 Herbert C. Hoover Secretary of Commerce 1921 Thomas Jefferson Secretary of State 1789 James Madison Secretary of State 1801 James Monroe Secretary of State and War 1811 William H. Taft Secretary of War 1904 Cabinet Members who became President

  44. Presidents Duties • One of the first things the president must do is staff the executive branch. • Staffing the Cabinet • Cabinet: • Group of men and women that advise the president on specific issues. • 14 cabinet members • Senate approves appointees.

  45. Tradition and Custom • The cabinet is a product of tradition and hope. • Tradition: • Cabinet used to meet with the president and they would make decisions together. • The idea of this is good, why? • This idea is also fiction, why?

  46. The Selection of the Cabinet • President must consider ….. • whether backgrounds suit cabinet posts, • geographical balance, • satisfy interest groups, • administrative skills, • ethnic, racial, gender considerations. • Robert Weaver: first African American Secretary. • Frances Perkins: first Woman Secretary. • Cavazos: first Hispanic Secretary • Cabinet members are: • usually college graduates -leaders in professional fields.

  47. The Role of the Cabinet • Cabinet are heads of exec. Departments. • President has always determined role. • Will they be active or inactive • Modern presidents have turned to staff and close friends as advisors. • “inner cabinet” • certain cabinet members influence the president’s decisions related to their departments’ areas of interest. • Secretary of state, treasury, attorney general, and defense are included in the inner cabinet.

  48. Limiting the Cabinets Role • Conflicting Loyalty • Secrecy and Trust

  49. Cabinets are WEAK • Why? • Cabinet members seek to • Defend • Explain • Enlarge

  50. The Executive Office

More Related