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The President and the Executive Branch. Objectives. Identify the six major ways the president leads the country. Explain the role and duties of the Vice President. Describe how the White House Offices help the President do his job. Explain the roles and duties of the special councils.
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The President and the Executive Branch
Objectives • Identify the six major ways the president leads the country. • Explain the role and duties of the Vice President. • Describe how the White House Offices help the President do his job. • Explain the roles and duties of the special councils. • Explain the role and duties of each Cabinet.
The three branches of U . S. government… The job of the Executive Branch is to….
Constitutional Qualifications for aPresident… • Natural Born citizen of the U.S. • Age 35 or older • A resident of the U.S. for 14 years • The Term of Office for the President… =4 years =The 22nd Amendment… =2 terms or 10 years • The President’s annual salary: $400,000 per year $50,000 for expenses • The VP’s annual salary: $221,000 per year
Inauguration DayJanuary 20th The day the President & Vice President take the oath of office. The President must repeat the following oath: I do solemnly swear [or affirm] that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States. The 20th Amendment….
The President lives in the…White Houseat1600 Pennsylvania AveWashington D.C.3D tour- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ktqgtlFjWRw
White House layout created by Peter Sharkey The Floor of State/First Floor Ground Floor of the Residence Source: http://www.whitehousemuseum.org/.htm
White House layout created by Peter Sharkey The Top Floor/Third Floor The Family Residence/Second Floor Source: http://www.whitehousemuseum.org/.htm
East Wing Second Floor First Floor Source: http://www.whitehousemuseum.org/ew1.htm
West Wing Ground Floor Source: http://www.whitehousemuseum.org/ww0.htm
West Wing First Floor Source: http://www.whitehousemuseum.org/ww0.htm
West Wing Second Floor Source: http://www.whitehousemuseum.org/ww0.htm
White House Facts • 6 levels, 132 rooms, 35 bathrooms, 28 fireplaces, 8 staircases & 3 elevators, 412 doors, 147 windows. • The WH has a tennis court, track, pool, movie theater, billiard room & bowling lane. • 6,000 people visit each day • The White House is on the $20 bill • In past called the “Executive Mansion”, “Presidential Palace’, and President’s House” • Each new resident of the White House is offered a $100,000 decorating stipend, and additional funds are raised privately. • Other firsts
The seal of the President of the United States of America is based upon the Great Seal of the USA. The Presidential seal pictures an American bald eagle holding a ribbon in its beak; the ribbon has the motto of the USA, "E PLURIBUS UNUM," meaning "Out of many, one." The eagle is clutching an olive branch (with 13 olives and 13 leaves) in one foot (symbolizing peace) and 13 arrows in the other (the 13 stands for the original 13 colonies and the arrows symbolize the acceptance of the need to go to war to protect the country). A shield is in front of the eagle; the shield has 13 red and white stripes (representing the original 13 colonies) with a blue bar above it (it symbolizes the uniting of the 13 colonies and represents congress). Above the eagle are 13 white clouds, 13 white stars, and many tiny stars. 50 white stars surround the eagle in a circle (on a deep blue field). The words, "Seal of the President of the United States" surround the seal (on a tan field). Source: http://www.enchantedlearning.com/history/us/symbols/presidentialseal/
Presidential Limousine(clip) Cadillac – A tank made to look like a car- Armored, bullet-proof & contains a ventilation system in the event of a chemical attack. Total of 3 limousines costing $10 million. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxUvIUGQbY8 President Obama’s new ride
Presidential AirplaneAir Force One • The Air Force aircraft that carries the President. • The President has 2 customized Boeing 747s. These planes are solely for presidential air transport.
The Presidential HelicopterMarine One Marine One (National Geographic Special)- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mY8vDFbzH4g First departure of Pres. Obama on Marine One- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSW8CSMhBJg
The Presidential RetreatCamp David, Maryland • 70 miles from Washington D.C. • A place to relax & entertain • Has a pool, putting green, driving range, tennis courts, gym & guest cabins.
The Role of the First Lady • The hostess of the White House • The wife of the President • The FL is not an elected position, carries no official duties & receives no salary. • The FL attends official ceremonies of state with or in place of the President.
The 6 Jobs of the U.S. President • Chief Executive • Enforces our federal laws • Appoints people to run the government • Provides ideas for laws • Develops a budget • Directs 5m employees & spends trillions of dollars • Chief of State (Country) A ceremonial job… • Meets with visitors from other countries • Gives speeches on important holidays
The 6 Jobs of the U.S. President • Chief Diplomat • Sets our foreign policy • Makes treaties with other countries… The Senate approves treaties • Appoints ambassadors • Keeps the peace with other countries • Commander-in-Chief • The leader of the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force & Marines • The power to send troops anywhere in the world
The 6 Jobs of the U.S. President • Chief Lawmaker • Works hard to get Congress to pass his laws • The power to veto laws • Gives The State of the Union Address each year • Party Chief • The leader of his political party • Helps his party members get elected to office • Works with members of his party in Congress
The Presidential Succession Act of 1947 • If the President is unable to hold office the following will become President… • Vice President • Speaker of the House of Rep. • President Pro Tempore • most senior senator in the majority party • The Cabinet positions
The President’s Team The President | Vice _________ Executive ______ Cabinet President Office of the President | - White House Office - Special Councils
The Vice President(VP) • The VP is selected by the President • The Constitution states that the VP becomes President when the President cannot fulfill the functions necessary; and the VP is the President of the Senate. • The President assigns the VP work
Vice President Residence • Number One Observatory Circle- the vice president’s residence is not open for public tours. • The 9,150-square-foot, three-story Victorian home was built in 1893. • For 185 years, VPs and their families lived in their own homes or, on occasion, lavish hotel suites. The associated costs and security logistics made this custom increasingly impractical. • Finally, in 1974, Congress voted to make the house at the Naval Observatory the official vice president’s residence. • Walter Mondale was the first vice president to move into the home. • Donations to the nonprofit Vice President’s Residence Foundation pay for decorating expenses. • Source: georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov
The White House Offices“The heart or nerve center” • The President’s closest advisors • They work in the White House • They advise the President on foreign policy, military issues and relations with Congress • The Chief of Staff… Supervises: Speech writing, Planning trips, Press releases
The Special Councils • National Security Council (NSC) • Membership includes… Vice President Secretaries of State, Treasury & Defense Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Director of CIA • Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) • Council of Economic Advisors • Council of Environmental Quality
The President's Cabinetor Executive Departments • The purpose of the Cabinet is to advise the President • The Cabinet members attend weekly meetings with the President.
Who makes up the President’s Cabinet? • The Cabinet includes the VP & the heads of 15 executive departments… • The Secretaries of… Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Interior Labor State Transportation Treasury Justice Veterans Affairs Homeland Security Health-Human Services Housing & Urban Develop.
Department of State • Advises the President on foreign policy • Manages embassies & consulates • Protects citizens who work or travel in foreign countries.
Department of Treasury • Collects taxes • Borrows money and repays loans for the federal government • Prints and coins money
Department of Defense • Controls the nations armed forces • Advises the President about military and security matters
The Department of Justice • Enforces federal laws • Represents the federal government in court cases • Manages federal prisons
The Department of the Interior • Manages our national parks • Conserves our natural resources • Manages Indian reservations
The Department of Agriculture • Helps the American farmer • Inspects our food • Runs the school lunch program
The Department of Commerce • Promotes foreign trade • Helps the U.S. economy to grow • Takes the U.S. Census every ten years
The Department of Labor • Enforces labor laws (Example: child labor laws) • Provides benefits to the unemployed • Maintains a safe work area
The Department of Health and Human Services • Managers welfare programs • Provides Social Security • Provides aid to handicapped people
The Department of Housing & Urban Development • Provides money to improve our cities
The Department of Transportation • Enforces federal laws on air, sea & rail transportation • Manages the federal highway & rail systems • Develops mass transit systems.
Finds, protects and conserves our energy sources: water power, oil & natural gas Regulates the use of nuclear power The Department of Energy
The Department of Education • Provides financial help for schools • Provides financial help for handicapped education • Collects & publishes information on education
The Department of Veteran Affairs • Operates programs that help veterans • Provides education, medical care and home loans for veterans