1 / 14

Chapter 8-The Presidency

Chapter 8-The Presidency. Section 1-President/VP. Duties of the Prez. Has a lot of power & responsibility Makes sure laws are fully executed Commander in chief of Armed Forces Appoints top officials, federal judges, ambassadors, & meets with foreign governments. President’s Term and Salary.

marin
Download Presentation

Chapter 8-The 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. Chapter 8-The Presidency Section 1-President/VP

  2. Duties of the Prez • Has a lot of power & responsibility • Makes sure laws are fully executed • Commander in chief of Armed Forces • Appoints top officials, federal judges, ambassadors, & meets with foreign governments

  3. President’s Term and Salary • 22nd Amendment limits presidents to two terms (maximum amount of years for person to be president=10 years) • Congress determines salary=$400,000 in 2001 (prior to that salary was $200,000)

  4. Qualifications According to Constitution • 35 • Candidate must be natural-born citizen • Resident of U.S. for 14 years prior to running for office of president

  5. Benefits • Aka compensation • Salary • Air Force 1 & Marine 1 • Best medical and dental care • Camp David (weekend get away for family) • Fleet of limos (bulletproof windshield) • Privilege of living in a 132 room mansion-White House (has swimming pool, bowling alley, movie theater, tennis courts, etc.)

  6. Presidential Succession • 25th amendment established order of succession to the presidency • 25th amendment also states rules to be followed if a president becomes disabled • Why was the 25th amendment in 1967 added to the Constitution?

  7. VP’s Role • VP work depends on what jobs, if any, the president assigns • President of the Senate (what is the most important reason for being the president of the Senate?) • Why have recent presidents tried to give their vps more responsibility?

  8. Section 2-Electoral College • Electoral College-Article II, Section 1 established e.c. • Each state chooses electors-has as many electors as senators and representatives in Congress (HR based on state’s population) • Electoral vote-when electors meet in their state capitals the Monday after the 2nd Wednesday in Dec to cast their votes for president and v.p. • Winner takes all-candidate that wins the largest # of popular votes receives all the state’s electoral votes except ME and NE

  9. Section 3-Cabinet • President appoints secretaries that head 15 major executive departments; each appointee must be approved by Senate • 15 secretaries, vice president and several other top officials make up president’s cabinet-pp 276-278-Chapter 10-Briefly summarize each cabinet position and illustrate! Yeah!

  10. Executive Office-Section 4 • EOP=Executive Office of the President-consists of people and agencies that directly assist president • OMB=Office of Management and Budget-largest agency in EOP-prepares the national budget

  11. Section 4-continued • National Security Council • National Homeland Security Council • Council of Economic Advisers (Advisors) • White House Office-press secretary

  12. Chapter 9-Section 2 • Head of State • Chief executive-executive orders, reprieves, pardons, amnesty • Chief legislator • Economic planner-Council of Economic Advisers • Party leader-patronage • Chief diplomat-treaties, executive agreements • Commander in Chief

  13. Section 3-Styles of Leadership • Increased responsibilities • Leadership qualities and skills • Understanding the public • Ability to communicate • Sense of timing • Openness to new ideas • Ability to compromise • Political courage

  14. Section 3-continued • Presidential isolation • Special treatment • Voicing opinions • Access to the president • Dangers of isolation • Executive privilege

More Related