1 / 38

Unit 5

Unit 5. The Executive Branch. What are three qualities that make a good leader? . The executive branch. Section 1: The Presidential Office. Presidential vocabulary. Executive Having the power to put plans, actions, or laws into effect. Bureaucracy

jacoba
Download Presentation

Unit 5

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. Unit 5 The Executive Branch

  2. What are three qualities that make a good leader?

  3. The executive branch Section 1: The Presidential Office

  4. Presidential vocabulary • Executive • Having the power to put plans, actions, or laws into effect. • Bureaucracy • A system of government in which most of the important decisions are made by state officials rather than by elected representatives • Administration • The process or activity of running a business, organization, etc. • The People Responsible for this

  5. Roles of the President • Chief Executive—carries out the nation’s laws • Commander in Chief—leader of the nation’s armed forces • Chief Agenda Setter • State of the Union Address • Budget proposal • Representative on the Nation • Chief of State—symbolizes the US and its people • Foreign Policy Leader—our plans for dealing with other countries • Party Leader

  6. QUALIFICATIONS TO BE PRESIDENT

  7. TERMS AND LIMITS OF PRESIDENT • 4 Year Term • 2 term limit • A president can serve a total of ten years… how is that possible?

  8. “Its good to be President” • $ 400,000/ year Salary • $50,000/ year expense allowance • White House & Camp David • “The Beast”, Marine One, Air Force One

  9. AIR FORCE ONE

  10. DISCUSS… • Does the President make too much ? • Median Income in U.S. Home $50,000 • Fortune 500 CEO’s $10,600,000

  11. Order or succession

  12. The executive branch Section 2: Presidential Powers

  13. Power of the Presidency • Executive Powers • Diplomatic Powers • Judicial Powers • Legislative Powers

  14. Growth of Presidential Power • Presidential power has increased over time, mostly because of the men who have held the office • Do you think the President has too much power? Why or why not?

  15. The executive branch Section 3: Presidential Nomination and Election

  16. How do we nominate presidential candidates? • Framers did not set a means for nominating presidential candidates, only for electing the President and VP • Nomination procedures have changed over time • 1800’s—Congressional caucuses were used • Later, national conventions used to nominate • Presidential primaries • Choosing delegates for the conventions • Show voter preference • Some states use caucuses instead of primaries • These are held early in the year • Most weak candidates are eliminated • Most nominees are known before the convention • National Nomination Convention • Speeches • Adoption of a party platform • State roll call of votes for the candidates • Candidate who wins the nomination then campaigns for several months before the general election is held

  17. The Electoral College • Actually chooses the president and VP • Each state has electoral votes = to number in Congress • Popular vote in each state determines who the electors will vote for • 3 criticisms of electoral college • Candidate can win election and lose popular vote • A state’s electoral votes do not have to reflect its popular vote • A strong bid by a third-party or independent candidate could mean that neither major-party candidate receives the majority of the electoral votes, throwing the election into the House of Representatives

  18. 2008 Electoral Votes

  19. 2012 Electoral Votes

  20. Electoral college webpage http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/electoral-college/about.html

  21. The executive Branch Section 4: Executive Office of the President and the Cabinet

  22. THERE ARE 2 PARTS TO THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH: • 1. Executive Office of the President • 2. The Cabinet

  23. Executive Office of the President • 1. White House Office • Before Civil War • No help • Presidents paid for help out of own pocket • Today • Large office staff • President picks—no Senate approval • Chief of Staff is leader • Controls access to the President • Advisors • National security • Domestic policy • Speechwriters • How to deal with Congress • Press secretary • Deal with mail • 20,000 letters/week • Thousands of emails • Many, many others

  24. Executive Office of the President • 2. National Security Council • Set up in 1947 • Improve coordination among gov depts. That deal w/ national security issues (CIA, FBI, State Dept) • National Security Advisor is head • Sometimes travel to other countries to negotiate • 3. Office of Management and Budget • Executive branch agencies submit budgets to the OMB • Helps Pres. prepare budgets • 4. Council of Economic Advisors • Set up in 1946 • Econ advise to President

  25. Executive Office of the President • 5. National Economic Council • Set up in 1993 (Clinton) • Monitor and advise the Pres on US trade and industrial technology • 6. The Vice President • Constitution • Lead the Senate • Take over if President can’t perform duties • Today—move involved • Help agencies run more smoothly • Many more important duties

  26. II. The Cabinet • 14 departments that assist the president in carrying out the work of the executive branch • Heads are called secretaries (Exception: Attorney General) • Early days—president relied heavily on Cabinet for advice • Today—not as much because of White House staff • Pres does not need full Cabinet meetings • Each deal with specific area

  27. Cabinet • Dept. of Agriculture • Dep. of Interior • Dept. of Commerce • Dept. of Justice • Dept. of Defense • Dept. of Labor • Dept. of Education • Dept. of State • Dept. of Energy • Dept. of Transportation • Dept. of Health and Human Services • Dept. of the Treasury • Dept. of Housing and Urban Development • Dept. of Veteran Affairs

  28. Cabinet website • http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/cabinet

More Related