1 / 13

By: Eve Nam & Kathy Hu Period 7

EXECUTIVE BRANCH IV. INSTITUTIONS OF NATIONAL GOVERNMENT: The Congress, the Presidency, the Bureaucracy, and the Federal Courts (35-45% ). By: Eve Nam & Kathy Hu Period 7 . Executive Branch. sole authority daily administration of the state Consists of: President Vice president

dasan
Download Presentation

By: Eve Nam & Kathy Hu Period 7

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. EXECUTIVE BRANCHIV. INSTITUTIONS OF NATIONAL GOVERNMENT: The Congress, the Presidency, the Bureaucracy, and the Federal Courts (35-45%) By: Eve Nam & Kathy Hu Period 7

  2. Executive Branch • sole authority • daily administration of the state • Consists of: • President • Vice president • 15 cabinet-level executive department

  3. President • Head of state • Commander-in-Chief of armed forces • Responsible for enforcing laws written by congress • Appoints the heads • Power to: • Sign legislation • Veto bills • negotiate and sign treaties • Extend pardons and clemencies for federal crimes • 3 Qualifications for the presidency: • At least 35 years old • Natural born citizen • Lived in U.S. for 14 years • Informal Duties • Fulfills critical advisory role • Leader of his party; supporting candidates and the platform • National focal point during times of emergency and crisis • Works face-to-face with international leaders • Representing goals of a nation

  4. Vice President • Be ready to assume the Presidency if President is unable to perform his duties • Elected by electoral college • Serves as president of the United States Senate

  5. The Cabinet • Made up of heads of the 15 executive departments • Department of Agriculture • Department of Commerce • Department of Defense • Department of Education • Department of Energy • Department of Health and Human Services • Department of Homeland Security • Department of Housing and Urban Development • Department of the Interior • Department of Justice • Department of Labor • Department of State • Department of Transportation • Department of Treasury • Department of Veterans Affairs • Appointed by the president, confirmed by the state • Run major federal agencies

  6. Relationship between Congress • Members of the executive branch can not be in congress • Equal under the constititution • The relationship changes every single day • In times of peace and prosperity, congress has been the more dominant institution • In times of war and danger, the executive branch is the dominant branch

  7. Relationship with the Bureaucracy • Most of the departments are in the executive branch • President can appoint and remove agency heads; reorganize the bureaucracy • Make choices in budget proposals • Issue executive orders • Reduce and agency’s budget

  8. Relationship between the Federal Courts • President appoints federal judges with “advice and consent” of senate • Usually consults senators or other elected officials concerning candidates for vacancies on federal courts • Department of Justice is most frequent litigator in federal court system

  9. Public opinion and voting • Public Opinion: • ways that citizens of a republic evaluate leaders, candidates, issues or institutions that control the laws and government • Critical to the ability of the leadership to have supporters and voters willing to follow the laws • Voting • Parties pay careful attention to what voters want • Leaders adjust priorities based on what is on voters’ minds • Voters’ level of accuracy have given them power

  10. Interest GROUPS • Exist to sway political leadership in order to have their issues heard • Allow citizens to: • Network • Fight for common goals • Influence government • Help members • Types of interest groups • Material Goals Group • Form in order to serve the needs of members • Issue Groups • Large numbers of people join together to help create changes or solutions • Ideological Groups • Organization comprised of voters of a given political persuasion to push groups’ overall agenda • Public Interest Groups • Provide services to the needy

  11. POLITICAL PARTIES • Democratic and Republican Parties controls main political landscape in the U.S • Have been able to build coalition that address issues brought forth by growing minorities • Republicans are more focused on states’ rights • Democrats more on the national level

  12. The Media • Media coverage shown a tendency toward biased political reporting for different candidates and parties • Supports the government • Level of free speech is severely diminished • Most media venues are owned by multimillion dollar corporations • Members of political parties or candidates use media • Internet as a major new source changes how facts are presented and shared

  13. Subnational governments • A governing institution below the national level (state government) • Conduct elections • Select local officials • Select electors • Traditional rights held by the states • Business licenses • Marriage licenses • Legal practice licenses • Professional licenses • Civil laws not involving federal issues • Criminal laws not made federal • Education rules

More Related