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Ch. 13 - The Presidency. The Many Roles of the President. Chief of State Ceremonial head of the country Acts as the “face of the U.S.” Welcomes foreign dignitaries For example…. The Many Roles of the President. Chief Executive Ensures that the nation’s laws are enforced and carried out
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The Many Roles of the President • Chief of State • Ceremonial head of the country • Acts as the “face of the U.S.” • Welcomes foreign dignitaries • For example…
The Many Roles of the President • Chief Executive • Ensures that the nation’s laws are enforced and carried out • Head of the executive branch
The Many Roles of the President • Chief Administrator • Head of the entire bureaucracy – people who work for the government to implement policies • Appoints everyone in the top levels of the bureaucracy, with approval of a majority of the Senate • May also fire any appointed person • does not need Senate approval for firing
The Many Roles of the President • Chief Diplomat • Develops the nation’s foreign policy stances • Top advisor on foreign policy is the Secretary of State • Spokesperson to the rest of the world • Meets and befriends leaders of foreign countries
The Many Roles of the President • Commander-in-Chief • Top commander of all branches of the armed forces • All are subject to his immediate control • Can wage undeclared wars
The Many Roles of the President • Chief Legislator • Proposes Laws to Congress • Chooses whether to sign bills into law or veto them • Can also issue executive orders – changes in executive branch policy that have the effect of law
The Many Roles of the President • Chief of Party • He is the undisputed leader and face of the party that helped elect him • Helps raise money and campaign for other party members • The “coattail effect” – Congressional candidates from the party “ride his coattails” into victory
The Many Roles of the President • Chief Citizen • Work to help the public as a whole, rather than private interests • Represent what all American people should be (in terms of character)
Qualifications WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO BE THE MOST POWERFUL MAN IN THE WORLD?!?!
Qualifications • 35 years old • Natural Born U.S. Citizen • Could be born in another country to an American parent (jus sanguinis) • Or born on U.S. soil (jus solis) • Resident of the U.S. for 14 years
Terms • Pres. serves a 4 year term • Limited to 2 terms by the 22nd Amendment • If V.P. takes over less than half of President’s term, it doesn’t count against him • Thus, most possible years = 10
$ Perks $ • Salary of $400,000 per year for life • $50,000 in expenses • Free medical care for life • Live in the White House • Use of Air Force One, Marine One, other transportation
Presidential Succession • Constitution originally only provided that when Pres. becomes incapable, V.P. would become “acting president” • Didn’t address: • Is V.P. now president forever? • Does “acting president” have the same power as president? • What if the V.P. leaves office? • Who decides if the president is “unable” • How is it determined when the president is “able” again? • All of this was fixed by the 25th Amendment (1967)
Presidential Succession • If president dies, resigns, is impeached, or is temporarily incapable, succession occurs • Pres. can be declared temporarily incapable by himself, or V.P. with a majority of the Cabinet (25th Amendment)
Presidential Succession • What if more than just the president dies, or is removed from office? • Order of Succession – set by Presidential Succession Act of 1947 • Vice President • Speaker of the House • President Pro-Tempore • Secretary of State • Each Cabinet Dept. Secretary in the order they were created
Presidential Succession • Impeachment – Explained in pieces of Articles I and II, on grounds of “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors” • House – “sole power of impeachment”, brings charges with a majority vote • Brought against 2 presidents – Andrew Johnson, Bill Clinton • Senate – “sole power to try all impeachments”, convicts and removes with a 2/3 vote • Never successfully removed a president • Chief Justice – presides over trial of the president
Vice-Presidential Succession • If V.P. dies or resigns, president picks a new one • Majority of both houses of Congress must approve
What Does the Veep Do? • 2 Important Jobs (sarcasm) • Take over if the Pres. dies • Preside over the Senate • These 2 jobs take no time, and allowed Dick Cheney to spend time shooting old men in the face
So What do They Really Do? Reagan didn’t let me do anything. • They do whatever the president lets them do
How to Pick a V.P. • Balance the Ticket – pick a guy with qualities that will draw voters you wouldn’t
President Reagan From California (West Coast) Very conservative Idea man – not concerned with details Vice-President Bush From Connecticut (East Coast) Moderate conservative Technocrat – obsessed with nuance/details Example of Balancing the Ticket
Great Moments in Vice Presidential History
As Joe Biden introduces himself at a campaign event in central Missouri, he takes a moment to recognize the achievements of a dedicated public servant who happens to be paraplegic and wheelchair-bound.
Presidential Powers • Article II offers a vague definition of the president’s power • Section 3 - “Take care that the laws be faithfully executed,” for example • Has allowed substantial growth in presidential power
Presidential Powers • National Security Powers • Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces (expressed in Article II) • Power to wage undeclared wars (implied from Commander-in-Chief power) • Power to negotiate treaties • Power to make executive agreements
Presidential Powers • Legislative Powers of the President • Power to sign or veto bills • Signing statements – written explanation of how the president intends to implement a law he signs • Veto can be overridden by a 2/3 vote in both houses of Congress • Power to propose laws to Congress • Power to issue executive orders – directives with the effect of law • Power to call special sessions of Congress
Presidential Powers • Judicial Powers of the President • Clemency powers (apply only in federal crimes) • Pardon – complete forgiveness of an individual’s crime • Ford’s pardon of Nixon after Watergate • Amnesty – complete forgiveness to all who violated a law • Jimmy Carter to draft dodgers, Reagan to illegal immigrants • Commutation – reducing a criminal sentence • George W. Bush reduced Scooter Libby’s sentence to 1 day after the “Plamegate” scandal • Reprieve – delay the execution of a sentence • 2 married Enron execs with children, mother was reprieved for 10 years so she could raise the kids while father was in prison
Presidential Powers • Judicial Powers of the President • Power to appoint judges and justices • must have “advice and consent” from Senate (majority vote)
What Determines Whether a President is Effective or Not? • Richard Neustadt’s Theory of Presidential Power: • The power of the presidency the power to persuade.
Neustadt’s 5 Constituencies • Effective Presidents successfully persuade the following 5 groups to back their agenda: • The Public • His Party • The Bureaucracy • Congress • Foreign Nations • Neustadt rates presidents based on how they do with each of these groups
Running the Government:The Executive Branch • The Cabinet • Presidential advisors, not in Constitution • Top executives of the 15 Federal Departments, confirmed by the Senate • Generally political appointments, not necessarily personally loyal to the president
Running the Government:The Executive Branch • The Executive Office of the President (EOP) • Made up of several policymaking and advisory bodies • Three principle groups: NSC, CEA, OMB Figure 13.1