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The Executive

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The White House Staff. The Cabinet. The Executive Office of the Presidency. The White House Staff. Determinants of Presidential Power. Persuasion. Controversies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Executive


1
The Executive
2
HistoryConstitutional DesignThe Singular and
Plural ExecutiveConstitutional PowersThe Rise
of Presidential PowerOrganizing the
PresidencyDeterminants of Presidential
PowerControversiesThe Governors OfficeCity
and County ExecutivesThe Executive and the
BureaucracyTypes of AgenciesBureaucratic
PowerRule MakingBureaucracy and Democracy
3
Political WingBureaucratic Wing
4
PresidentGovernorMayorCounty JudgeCity Manager
5
Elected / AppointedSingular / Plural
6
History
  • Executive Power historically meant the absolute
    power of the monarch

7
The evolution of free societies went hand in hand
with the efforts to reduce the powers of the
monarch. The stories are one and the same.
8
Magna CartaKing John
9
Key Limitation
  • Habeas Corpus

10
Problem Monarchs
  • Henry VIIIJames ICharles I

11
The Divine Right of Kings
  • Is the King the embodiment of law, or beneath law?

12
Grievances against George III
13
Consequence
  • No national executive established in the Articles
    of Confederation. But the lack of key

14
The U.S. Executive
  • Article II

15
The White HouseThe Bureaucracy
16
The Texas Executive
  • Article IVArticle VII

17
The GovernorThe Texas Bureaucracy
18
George Washington
  • The model for the presidency

19
Key Design feature of the National Executive
  • Singular

20
Article II, Section I
  • The executive Power shall be vested in a
    President of the United States of America.

21
Energy in the Executive
  • - Independence from Congress- Ability to lead in
    times of crisis

22
Unity in the executive makes leadership possible
23
The Four Year Term, between the 2 year House
term, and the 6 year Senate term, made the
president independent of both. So did the
Electoral College.
24
But the Senate was given advice and consent
powers in order to contain the president in terms
of staffing the executive and judiciary and
setting foreign policy.
25
Energy in the Executive is a leading character in
the definition of good government. It is
essential to the protection of the community
against foreign attacks it is not less essential
to the steady administration of the laws to the
protection of property against those irregular
and high-handed combinations which sometimes
interrupt the ordinary course of justice to the
security of liberty against the enterprises and
assaults of ambition, of faction, and of anarchy.
Every man the least conversant in Roman story,
knows how often that republic was obliged to take
refuge in the absolute power of a single man,
under the formidable title of Dictator, as well
against the intrigues of ambitious individuals
who aspired to the tyranny, and the seditions of
whole classes of the community whose conduct
threatened the existence of all government, as
against the invasions of external enemies who
menaced the conquest and destruction of Rome.
Federalist 70
26
The Presidents Powers
  • Expressed Defined in the ConstitutionDelegated
    Granted to the President by Congress

27
Both are controversial
28
Expressed powers can sometimes be ambiguous due
to the loose language of the Constitution
29
Delegated powers are argued by some to (1) allow
the President-and the bureaucracy-more discretion
than was intended by the founders, and (2) expand
the scope of power beyond what was intended.
30
Expressed Powers
  • MilitaryJudicialDiplomatic Executive
  • Legislative

31
Military
  • Article II, Section II The President shall be
    Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the
    United States, and of the Militia of the several
    States, when called into the actual Service of
    the United States Article II, Section III
    . . . and shall Commission all the Officers of
    the United States.

32
Military
But Congress has considerable Military Powers as
well. Recent Conflicts - War Powers
Resolution- Detainment of terrorist suspects
33
Judicial
  • Article II, Section II . . . shall appoint
    Ambassadors, . . . Judges of the supreme Court.
    . . . he shall have Power to Grant Reprieves
    and Pardons for Offenses against the United
    States, except in Cases of Impeachment.

34
Diplomatic
  • He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and
    Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided
    two thirds of the Senators present concur and he
    shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and
    Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors,

35
Executive
  • . . . he may require the Opinion, in writing,
    of the principal Officer in each of the executive
    Departments, upon any subject relating to the
    Duties of their respective Offices. . . .
    shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers
    and Consuls, . . . and all other Officers of the
    United States, whose Appointments are not herein
    otherwise provided for, and which shall be
    established by Law but the Congress may by Law
    vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers,
    as they think proper, in the President alone, in
    the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of
    Departments.
  • . . . The President shall have Power to fill up
    all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess
    of the Senate, by granting Commissions which
    shall expire at the End of their next
    Session.he shall take Care that the Laws be
    faithfully executed,

36
Legislative
  • He shall from time to time give to the Congress
    Information of the State of the Union, and
    recommend to their Consideration such Measures as
    he shall judge necessary and expedient he may,
    on extraordinary Occasions, convene both Houses,
    or either of them, and in Case of Disagreement
    between them, with Respect to the Time of
    Adjournment, he may adjourn them to such Time as
    he shall think proper The President can veto
    legislation, subject to override by a two-thirds
    vote in each chamber of the legislature.

37
Checks and Balances
  • How is the Executive checked by the other two
    branches? How can the executive check those
    branches?

38
Areas of controversy
  • Executive PrivilegeCan Congress subpoena
    members of the presidents administration?Signin
    g Statements

39
United States v. Nixon
40
Delegated Powers
  • Interstate Commerce ClauseNew DealGreat Society

41
Historic Dispute
  • The Second National BankAndrew Jackson argued
    that it was not supported by the necessary and
    proper clause.

42
Interstate Commerce Clause
43
New Deal
  • Increased regulation of the economy
  • Securities and Exchange Commission
  • The Wagner Act Labor Unions
  • Social Security
  • Work Projects
  • Problems with Supreme Court until 1937

44
Great Society
  • Civil Rights Act
  • Voting Rights Act
  • Medicare
  • Medicaid
  • Head Start
  • Education
  • No serious constitutional challanges

45
The Rise of Presidential Power - Part 1
  • The Legislative EpochThe Modern PresidencyThe
    Post-Modern Presidency

46
The Rise of Presidential Power - Part 2
  • King CaucusParty ConventionsThe Primaries

47
War and the Rise of Presidential Power
  • FDRs First Inaugural AddressCrisis leads to
    increased executive power

48
What makes for a powerful President?
  • PersuasionHigh Levels of Popularity

49
The Institutional Presidency
  • The CabinetThe Executive Office of the
    PresidencyThe White House Staff

50
The Cabinet
51
The Executive Office of the Presidency
52
The White House Staff
53
Determinants of Presidential Power
54
Persuasion
55
Controversies
56
The Governors Office
57
City and County Executives
58
The Executive and the Bureaucracy
59
Types of Agencies
60
Bureaucratic Power
61
Rule Making
62
Bureaucracy and Democracy
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