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CH. 13-2 PRESIDENTIAL SUCCESSION AND THE VICE PRESIDENCY. AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. THE CONSTITUTION AND SUCCESSION. PRESIDENTIAL SUCCESSION—the scheme by which a presidential vacancy is filled If the President dies, resigns, or is removed the Vice President succeeds to the office
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CH. 13-2 PRESIDENTIAL SUCCESSION AND THE VICE PRESIDENCY AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
THE CONSTITUTION AND SUCCESSION • PRESIDENTIAL SUCCESSION—the scheme by which a presidential vacancy is filled • If the President dies, resigns, or is removed the Vice President succeeds to the office • Original Constitution did not provide for succession • “The powers and duties” of the office—not the office itself—were to transfer to the V-P
(Presidential succession chart p. 359) • Presidential Succession Act of 1947 • Set the order of succession • A cabinet member is to serve only until a Speaker or president pro tem is available and qualified
PRESIDENTIAL DISABILITY • Serious gaps in the arrangement for presidential succession • For nearly 180 years, the country played with fate • President Eisenhower suffered 3 serious but temporary illnesses—heart attack(1955), ileitis(1956), mild stroke(1957) • Two other Presidents were disabled for longer periods of time
James Garfield lingered for 80 days before dying from an assassin’s bullet • Woodrow Wilson suffered a paralytic stroke in 1919 and was an invalid for the rest of his term • He could not meet with the cabinet for seven months • Sections 3 & 4 of the XXVth Amendment address disability in detail.
Vice President becomes “acting” President if: • 1) President informs Congress in writing that he/she is unable to discharge the powers and duties of the office. • 2) the V-P and majority of the members of the Cabinet inform Congress in writing that the President is so incapacitated • In both cases the President can resume his duties by telling Congress that no inability exists
The V-P and Cabinet can challenge the President about his ability to lead. Congress has 21 days to decide the matter. • Two instances where power was transferred: • 1) 1985—President Reagan transferred power to V-P George H. W. Bush for nearly 8 hours while surgeons removed a tumor from Reagan’s large intestine
2) President George W. Bush transferred power to V-P Dick Cheney for two hours, while Mr. Bush was anesthetized for a routine medical procedure
THE VICE PRESIDENCY • “I am Vice President. In this I am nothing, but I may be everything”—John Adams • 2 formal duties—1) President of the Senate (vote to break a tie); 2) help decide the question of presidential disability • The V-P is literally one heartbeat away from the Presidency • Major parties responsible for the low status of the office of V-P
Each party hand-picks their presidential candidate • The candidate picks someone as their running mate to BALANCE THE TICKET • BALANCE THE TICKET—a person that strengthens the candidate’s chances of winning because of certain ideological, geographic, racial, ethnic, gender or other characteristics
THE VICE PRESIDENT TODAY • (chart: V-P Succession p. 362) • The office has been reinvented • V-P Dick Chaney is seen as the most influential V-P in US history • He had a impressive resume (p. 363) • No President has been willing to make the V-P a true “Assistant President”
The major reason: only the V-P is not subject to the ultimate discipline of removal from office by the President • The Vice President CANNOT be fired by the President • VICE PRESIDENTIAL VACANCY • V-P has been vacant 18 times—9 by succession, twice by resignation, 7 times by death
XXVth Amendment deals with V-P vacancy • President will nominate a person subject confirmation by a majority vote in both houses of Congress • It was first used in 1973 when V-P Spiro Agnew resigned. President Nixon nominated Gerald R. Ford (MI) • It was used again in 1974 when President Ford nominated Nelson Rockefeller when Nixon resigned and Ford became President • THE END