1 / 33

The American Presidency

Explore the central dilemma of the American presidency and whether great presidents make history or are shaped by historical events. Analyze the impact of different presidents on significant moments in history and the powers and duties of the presidency throughout different time periods. Also delve into the qualifications, term limits, succession, salary, benefits, and election process of the president. Discover the leadership attributes of a successful president and compare the presidency to a prime ministerial system. Examine the powers and duties of the president as the Chief Executive, Commander-in-Chief, and in making appointments and treaties.

Download Presentation

The American Presidency

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. The American Presidency

  2. The Central Dilemma • The individual (his personality, skills, etc.) versus history (environment, nature of times) • Do great presidents make history or does history make them? • Would a president other than Lyndon Johnson have passed the civil rights legislation of the 1960s? • Would a president other than FDR have gotten us through the Great Depression and WWII? • Would a president other than Reagan have dealt as effectively with the Soviets?

  3. Historical Powers of the Presidency: 1. The Traditional President (late 1700s-early 1930s): presidents did little during this period, and Congress was generally dominant [exceptions?] 2. The Modern President (early 1930s-mid-1970s): a powerful activist presidency prompted by the Great Depression and WWII, Congress become less dominant. 3. The Postmodern President: a weakened presidency whose powers have been sapped by relative economic decline and the growth of interdependence. The world has now “closed in on” the American presidency. The main result of this is that in this new era a president must “go international’ in order to get much of anything done.

  4. Art. II Constitutional Qualifications of POTUS: (a) 35 or older (b) natural born (c) 14 years of residency (d) term limits (22 amendment-2 terms) (e) disability of president - 25th amendment. A new non-elected VP needs approval from both houses. (g) popularly elected – but indirect election through Electoral College. Many world leaders not elected but selected by someone. i.e., PM’s are chosen by the majority party.

  5. TERM & SUCCESSION: • 2 Term precedent – from who to who? • 22nd Amendment – 1951 – how long can POTUS actually serve? • Should this amendment be repealed? • Reasons for succession: • Death, resignation, impeachment AND conviction, temporary or permanent disability • Order of succession: • Determined by Congress – POTUS Succession Act • VP, Speaker, Pres. Pro Tempore, Sec. of State ….other cabinet members in order of cabinet creation. Who would be last?

  6. SALARY & BENEFITS: • $400,000 Salary • (VP= $230,700 & 10K expense account) • $50,000 Expense Account +… • Benefits: • Housing • Transportation • Health Care • Secret Service for Life • Pensions • Movie Theatre

  7. ELECTION • ELECTORAL COLLEGE • POTUS & VP are only 2 offices in this country elected by the electoral college method • Malapportionment • CA has approx. 1 electoral vote for every 500,000 voters; AK has 3 electoral votes for every 245,578 people.

  8. Electoral College • 4 times winner of popular vote has NOT won the POTUS election • 1824 – Jackson lost to John Q. Adams • 1876 – Tilden lost to Hayes • 1888 – Cleveland lost to Benjamin Harrison • 2000 – Gore lost to George W. Bush (43) • Election date is always the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. • Inauguration is always Jan. 20(per the 20th Amendment) • Oath of office is administered by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

  9. LEADERSHIP ATTRIBUTES OF POTUS: • Ability to: • manage a crisis • demonstrate leadership • appoint quality officials & judges • set & clarify the national agenda • achieve success in the foreign policy arena Democracy Equality

  10. POTUS vs. Prime Minister • How is a POTUS different from a Prime Minister? • POTUS has term limit • PM has no divided gov’t • PM is longtime party leader • Party discipline is better in a parliamentary system

  11. Art. II:Powers & Duties of the President CHIEF EXECTIVE head of Executive Branch CIA, FBI, NSA, US Attorneys, etc…. POTUS must enforce the Laws!! COMMANDER INCHIEF head of ALL armed forces

  12. Constitutional Powersb Art. II:Powers & Duties of the President POWER TO SIGN OR VETO laws passed by Congress **2/3 in both houses to override a veto** GRANTS REPRIEVES & PARDONS Reprieves = delay of punishment Pardon = forgiveness

  13. Art. II:Powers & Duties of the President MAKE TREATIES with other countries -must be approved by 2/3 of Senate -can also make Executive Agreements -what’s the difference? MAKE APPOINTMENTS to cabinet, Supreme Ct., ambassadors, etc. - Must be approved by Senate (a new POTUS makes approx. 3,000 appointments) Duty to report to Congress & the people on THE STATE OF THE UNION

  14. POWERS OF THE PRESIDENTAppointments: • To federal offices (bureaucracy) • Federal/SCOTUS judicial positions • Cabinet • Divided Government poses problems in appointment – why? • Harder to get Senate approval • Ideological conflicts • Offices may go unfilled

  15. POWERS OF THE PRESIDENTPower of Appointment: • So… how do appointments get confirmed? • go to public for support • build coalitions in Congress • make deals and compromise • diversify in his choices • do more background screening • Recess appointments: Making appointments while the Senate is out of session. (No Senate confirmation)

  16. Presidential Power • Presidential power is “the power to persuade” • A president’s power is related to the perception of three audiences: 1. Washington D.C. Insiders (Senate, House of Representatives, Supreme Court) 2. The party activists and officeholders outside Washington, IG’s 3. The mass public at large 4. A fourth audience today?

  17. ROLES OF POTUS: • Chief of State • Chief Executive • Chief Administrator • Chief Diplomat • Commander in Chief • Chief Legislator • Chief of Party • Chief Citizen

  18. Commander in Chief“War-making” Power of POTUS POTUS can commit troops in 1 of 3 ways: • Declaration of war by Congress (only 5 times in history) • National Emergency (natural disasters) • If use of force is in national interest War Powers Act of 1973 • POTUS POTUS must advise Congress of troop deployment within 48 hours – keep Congress advised • Commitment of troops ends after 60 days UNLESS approved by Congress

  19. War Powers…. War Powers Act has not yet been resolved by SCOTUS • All POTUS have deemed War Powers Act unconstitutional &, in many cases, ignored it POTUS who have flaunted war powers? Reagan – Grenada Bush, Sr. – Kuwait/Desert Storm Clinton – Haiti /Bosnia George W. – Iraq Obama – Osama Bin Laden (2011), Libya (2011), ISIS, Drone Strikes??

  20. POTUS as Chief Executive (Administrative Powers) Two resources for controlling the bureaucracy? • Appointment of top level administrators • Recommending budgets to Congress The Cabinet • 15 cabinet positions (Homeland Security is newest) White House Staff • Chief of Staff; Deputy Chiefs; Senior Advisors; Counsel

  21. THE EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS“EXECUTE ALL LAWS” EOP (Executive Office of the President) • Created by FDR – 1939, to support administration • Chief of Staff – POTUS top aide, manages EOP • National Security Council, OMB, Council of Economic Advisors, Office of National Drug Control, Office of First Lady, Trade Representative…. • Directly advise POTUS on a daily basis • None elected – over 600 – most NOT subject to Senate confirmation.

  22. State of Union address to Congress & the people. Set national agenda. Power to veto Only 4% of all vetoed bills overridden Line-item veto – Governors-YES, POTUS-NO POTUS ability to veto certain parts of a bill, without vetoing the entire bill. Chief Legislator(Legislative Powers)

  23. EXECUTIVE ORDERS:

  24. EXECUTIVE ORDERS – POTUS writes the law! Source: Constitution: implied; to further acts of Congress Can be overturned by Congress – don’t fund it or pass conflicting law OR by SCOTUS – held unconstitutional Can also be overturned by future POTUS Chief LegislatorORDINANCE POWER

  25. Chief LegislatorExecuative Orders

  26. Chief Diplomat – Treaties& Executive Agreements • POTUS have exclusive power to grant diplomatic recognition to a nation (Palestine) • POTUS have exclusive power to negotiate treaties (Senate approves) • In addition to treaty-making power, POTUS also have power to negotiate executive agreements with heads of foreign governments • What’s the difference? • NO SENATE RATIFICATION IS REQUIRED in this! • Note: Treaties are binding on future POTUS, but executive agreements are not. • Most routine; non-controversial - food deliveries, customs • BUT, can implement important & controversial policies • NAFTA (Clinton), TPP, UN Paris Climate Agreements (Obama)

  27. Relationship withthe Media • MUST have a good one! • Press Secretary (part of White House staff) deals with the press corps • POTUS gets much access to television spots • POTUS gets weekly radio address to discuss whatever he wants • POTUS have tried to control & spin the media since Watergate • Which POTUS had best relationship? Press Sec’y Robert Gibbs

  28. Public Approval • Polls used extensively • Average rating of outgoing Ps is 50% or less • During national emergencies, approval usually increases • Techniques that work: • FDR & Fireside Chats • Clinton & Town Hall Meetings • Factors affecting opinion of POTUS: • Pre & post election swings • Ability to handle a foreign crisis • CONDITION OF THE ECONOMY • Leadership during a domestic crisis • Ability to get programs through Congress

  29. APPROVAL RATINGS:

  30. IMPEACHMENT: • The President, Vice President & other public officials may be impeached & tried for treason, bribery & other high crimes & misdemeanors. • House of Reps impeaches (indicts) by a majority vote • Senate holds trial (jury) • Acquits or convicts (requires 2/3 vote) • What happens if convicted? • Only 2 POTUS have ever been impeached!

  31. The Clinton Vote: • Clinton was impeached on two counts, grand jury perjury (228–206) and obstruction of justice (221–212), with the votes split along party lines. • Senate Republicans couldn’t get the two-thirds majority for conviction. • On Feb. 12, 1999, the Senate acquitted President Clinton on both counts. • The perjury charge failed by a vote of 55–45, with 10 Republicans voting against impeachment along with all 45 Democrats. • The obstruction of justice vote was 50–50, with 5 Republicans breaking ranks to vote against impeachment.

More Related