Title: THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH
1THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH
2WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?
- Founders wanted
- a multi-executive branch where everybody
checked everybody - or.
- one executive doing multiple tasks with
significant power - Compromise one executive, some power with
checks
3CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY
- Article II, Sections 1-4
- 1 Establishes Presidency and Vice Presidency
elected by the Electoral College for 4 year
terms, qualifications, succession, salary and
oath. - 2 Commander and Chief, heads Cabinet, awards
Reprieves and Pardons, negotiates treaties and
confers federal appointments. - 3 Presents the State of the Union, can
convene congress in emergencies and is
responsible for law implementation. - 4 Impeachment-can be charged with treason,
bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors.
4ESTABLISHING THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH
- Inherent powers presidential powers not
explicitly noted in Constitution but implied as
related to the offices powers.
5CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS
- 12th Separate ballots (1804)
- 20th Term commencement (1933)
- 22nd Term limits (1951)
- 25th Succession (1967) VP
- Inability to perform
6OATH OF OFFICE
- I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully
execute the Office of the President of the United
States, and will to the best of my ability,
preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of
the United States.
7ROLES
- Commander in Chief (leader of the armed services)
- Chief Legislator (recommends and acts on
legislation) - Chief Diplomat (treaties, executive agreements)
- Chief Administrator (leader of the bureaucracy,
implements policy, appointments,
reprieves/pardons) - Head (Chief) of State (represents country)
- Head of his/her political party
8QUALIFICATIONS
- 35 years of age or older
- 14 years U..S. residency
- Natural born citizen
-
-
9THE BENEFITS
- A nice house
- A salary of 400,000 per year (taxable)
- Expense account of 50,000 per year (taxable)
- Travel expenses of 100,000 per year (tax-free)
- Secret Service protection
- Pension, on retirement, cabinet member's salary
(taxable) - Staff support on leaving the presidency
- A place in the country - Camp David
- A personal airplane - Air Force One
- A fine chef (24/7)
- Lifetime up to Bill Clinton, President Bush will
have ten years
10FLAT BROKE AND BUSTED
- Some presidents left office impoverished
including James Monroe, Ulysses S. Grant and
Harry Truman. - Herbert Hoover accepted funds to save Harry
Truman from embarrassment.
11TAKING CARE OF THE EXes
- 1958 Former Presidents Act
- Salary equal to Cabinet Secretaries
- Health care
- Secret Service Protection (inc. immediate
family) - Use of residence at 716 Jackson Pl. (D.C.)
- Operating budget office, equipment,
supplies, postage, secretary etc. - Can address the Senate
122006 EXPENSES
- Pensions, staff salaries/benefits, travel, office
rental, telephone, postage, printing, supplies,
equipment etc. (per year) - Ford-542,000
- Carter-504,000
- Bush-728,000
- Clinton-1,125,000
- Total 2,899,000
- plus Secret Service protection,
- medical care, presidential
- library and a State funeral
13PENSION BENEFITS
- Former presidents (regardless of terms) 180,100
(equal to cabinet secretaries) - Former vice-presidents 27,653 after eight years
of service - Former chief justice 208,100 annually (full
salary) after reaching 65 years of age and 15
years of service - Former associate justices 199,200
14PRESIDENTS BY AGE (Years and Tenths of a Year)
- YOUNGEST
- Teddy Roosevelt 42.9
- John Kennedy 43.7
- Bill Clinton 46.4
- Ulysses Grant 46.9
- Grover Cleveland 48.0
-
- OLDEST
- Zachary Taylor 64.3
- George Bush 64.6
- James Buchanan 65.9
- William Harrison 68.1
- Ronald Reagan 69.9
- Oldest living-Reagan, 93 (died in 2004)
15ROOSEVELT AND REAGAN
16DOES IT MATTER?
- Lincoln 64
- L. Johnson 63
- Clinton 62½
- Jefferson 62 ½
- Arthur 62
-
-
- J.Q. Adams 57
- McKinley 57
- Harrison 56
- Van Buren 56
- Madison 54
17MADISON AND LINCOLN
18CHOOSING THE PRESIDENTThe Electoral College
19BY THE NUMBERSWinning in the Electoral College
- Total electors voting 538
- House (435), Senate (100), Wash. DC (3)
- Needed to win 270
- Vote in December (following the popular vote in
November), results announced in January - awarded by the 23rd amendment in 1961
-
20NO MAJORITY (270)?
- Without a majority the House votes for President
and the Senate selects the Vice President. Each
state gets one vote. - 1800 tie-Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr
- House chose Jefferson
- 1824 Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson
- House chose Adams
21THE ELECTORS
- Electors chosen by each states political parties
(Republican, Democrat, Green etc.) - Results are forwarded to Washington DC
- Electors traditionally vote according to the
majority vote in their respective states - Electors are not required to vote as their state
votes (has occurred and has not been a factor in
any election)
22ELECTORAL COLLEGE REPRESENTATOIN
- California leads the nation with the largest
delegation in the Electoral College - 53 Representatives
- 2 Senators
- 55 Electoral voters
- Note 33 Democrats, 20 Republicans (House)
- 2 Democrats (Senate)
23ELECTORAL COLLEGE
- Article II, Section 1
- People vote for electors
- Electors vote for Pres. V.P.
- Each state (Reps. Sens.)
- Needed 270 to win (538 total)
- Count by current Vice President
- Popular vote-1st Tuesday in November
- College vote-1st Monday after the 2nd Wednesday
in December - House and Senate responsibilities if electoral
majorities are not attained
24BUT I WON!
- 1876 Hayes won electoral vote, Tilden popular
vote. - 1888 Harrison won electoral vote, Cleveland won
popular vote. - 2000 Bush won electoral vote, Gore won popular
vote.
25(No Transcript)
26- 2000 and 2004 elections
- 2000 Bush v Gore
- 2004 Bush v Kerry
27MULTIPLE TERMS SINCE 1900
- Wilson, FDR, Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan, Clinton
and George W. - Four failed-Taft, Hoover, Carter and George H.W.
Bush
28POWERS
- State of the Union
- Treaties
- Veto (pocket, line item)
- Impoundment (withholding or deferring funds) 1984
act - Appointments (recess)
- Pocket veto cannot be
- overridden (1996-1998)
- President Clinton was
- authorized by Congress to
- employ the power of the line veto
-
- Executive Privilege (1974, except in criminal
proceedings) - Legislative
- Executive Orders (given to the Bureaucracy
clarifying treaties and laws) - Reprieves and Pardons (excepting impeachment
convictions)
- Executive Agreements (Case Act of 1972), 10 times
of treaties.
29CMON BACK..
- President can convene a special session of
congress as related to national security - Last time 1933, FDR in the Great Depression
- Can also adjourn Congress if it cannot agree to
30 THIS IS WHERE WEVE BEEN, THIS IS WHERE WE ARE
AND THIS IS WHERE WERE GOING
- State of the Union president is required from
time to time to address the congress - 1790, Washington first address
- 1800 Jefferson broke tradition sent written
message (practice lasted about 100 years) - 1912 Wilson reestablished the oral tradition
- 1993 (Clinton) and 2001 (Bush) did not give State
of the Unions (starting out first terms) - From duty to power?
31WHEELIN AND DEALIN
- Executive Agreements
- To date approximately 5,000
- Do not require Senate approval
- Not binding on future administrations
- Note In the Case Act of 1972 President
must inform congress of all executive agreements
within sixty days. (foreign affairs)
- Treaties
- To date approximately 900
- 2-3s approval vote of the Senate
- Binding on future administrations
32BY ORDER OF THE PRESIDENT
- Executive orders must be based on laws passed by
Congress or the constitutional powers of the
President - 50-100 per year
33EXECUTIVE ORDERS
- 1863 President Lincolns Emancipation
Proclamation - 1948 President Truman, integration of the armed
forces - 1965 President Johnson on Affirmative Action on
federal contracts - 1976 President Ford, forbids assassination of
foreign leaders - 1980s President Reagan banned abortion
counseling in federally supported clinics - 1993 President Clinton, troops in Kosovo and
overturned Reagans on abortion counseling.
34THE PARDON
- The President has the authority to pardon anyone
for a federal offense at any time during his/her
presidency at any point in the criminal process
(federal forgiveness) - Cannot pardon anyone convicted of impeachment
- Cannot pardon him/herself
- Commutation cuts short an existing prison term
35THE PARCDON PROCESS
- End of year tradition
- Review by the Office of the Pardon Attorney
(Department of Justice) - Final decision-President
- Factors
- Seriousness of the crime
- How old is the crime
- Responsibility/remorse
- Rehabilitation
- Compelling need
- Official recommendations
36THE PARDON
- Article II, section 2
- Virtually Uncheckable
- Nixon pardon by Ford
- Iran/Contra pardons by Bush
- Rich pardon by Clinton
- 16-Washington
- 0-Harrison and Garfield
- 3,683-FDR
- 2,031-Truman
- 1187-Johnson
- 926-Nixon
- Ford
- 563-Carter
- 406-Reagan
- 77-H.W. Bush
- 457-Clinton
- 113 Bush (through 2006)
37THE PARDON
- July 27-30, 1974 House Committee approved three
articles of impeachment - August 9, 1974 President Nixon resigned the
presidency under the threat of impeachment
- President Ford pardoned President Nixon on
September 8, 1974 - Pardon may be granted to anyone suspected,
accused or convicted of any crime.
38NOTABLE PARDONS
- Civil War southerners
- Vietnam deserters
- Nixon
- Iran Contra (Reagans agents)
39A QUESTION OF LAW, THE VETO
- A bill becomes law when
- the President signs it.
- the President allows it to sit on his desk
(unsigned) for 10 days while Congress is in
session.
- A bill does not become law when
- the President vetoes it.
- the President allows it to sit on his desk
(unsigned) for less than 10 days and Congress
adjourns. This is called a pocket veto.
40THE VETO-NOT!
- Presidents ability to negate legislation.
- Requires a 2/3 vote override in both houses.
- President Bush in 1 terms has vetoed one piece
of legislation (embryonic stem cell research). - Since 1789 2,551 vetoes, 106 overridden
41BY THE NUMBERSPRESIDENTIAL VETOES
- Franklin Roosevelt, 635, success rate 97.6
- Harry Truman, 250, success rate 93.3
- Dwight Eisenhower, 181, success rate 97.3
- John Kennedy, 21, success rate 100
- Lyndon Johnson, 30, success rate 100
- Richard Nixon, 43, success rate 73.1
- Gerald Ford, 66, success rate 75
- Jimmy Carter, 31, success rate 84.6
- Ronald Reagan, 78, success rate 76.9
- George H.W. Bush, 46, success rate 96.6
- Bill Clinton, 36, success rate 94.4
- George W. Bush, 1, success rate 100
- up to President Clinton most congresses were
dominated by a majority of Democrats
42OVER 200 MILITARY ACTIONS, 5 DECLARED WARS
- War of 1812 (1812-1815) with Great Britain over
territorial and sea rights. (Madison) - Mexican-American War (1846-1848) with Mexico over
western and mid western territory (Polk)? - Spanish-American War (1898) with Spain over
economic interests terr. (McKinley) - WWI (1917-1918) with Germany over national
interests (Taft) - WW II (1941-1945) with Germany, Japan Italy in
response to attack on Pearl Harbor
43WAR POWER LAST FIFTY YEARS
- 1950-53 Korea (N.Korea China, Truman)
- 1956-75 Viet Nam (N.Viet Nam Viet Cong,
Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon) - 1965 Dominican Republic (Dominican rebels,
Johnson) - 1982-84 Lebanon (Syria various Muslim leftist
Lebanese militias, Reagan) - 1983 Grenada (Marxist Grenadian faction
- Cuba, Reagan)
- 1989 Panama (Panama, Bush)
- 1991-present Iraq (Iraq, Bush, Clinton, Bush)
44WAR POWERS ACT, A CHECK?
- 1973 Presidents required to consult with Congress
when sending troops abroad to defend country or
assist allies (within 48 hours) and must withdraw
troops in sixty days if Congress does not declare
war. - passed over Nixons veto
45EXTRAORDINARY POWERS
- John Adams and the Alien and Sedition Acts
(punishment of anti-government speech) - Abraham Lincoln and the suspension of habeas
corpus (the right to challenge ones detention by
the government) - Woodrow Wilson and his support of prosecution of
those who criticized the war effort (WWI) - Franklin Roosevelt and his detention of
Japanese-Americans - Lyndon Johnson and his approval of domestic
wiretapping on citizens (and some
congresspersons) - Richard Nixon and his approval of domestic
wiretapping of so called subversives - George W. Bush and his approval of domestic
wiretapping of those suspected of terrorist ties
46CAMP DAVIDHome away from home.
47EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (EOP)
- Housed next to the White House (Eisenhower
Building) - Four major policy making bodies
- National Security Council (foreign and
military - policy)
- Council of Economic Advisors (Economic
- policy)
- Office of Management and Budget
(oversees - development and management of the
budget) - Office of Homeland Security (advises
President on - matters regarding domestic security)
48EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT (EOP)
- Council of Economic Advisors
- Council of Environmental Quality
- National Critical Materials Council
- National Security Council
- Office of Administration
- Office of Management and Budget
- Office of Policy Development
- Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
- Office of Science and Technology Policy
- Office of the Vice President
- Office of National Drug Control Policy
- White House Office
49THE DYNAMIC DUO
- Vice President is completely dependent upon the
President for his work. - The President is not authorized to remove the
Vice President. - Next in succession
- Heads the Senate, breaks ties (Cheney-11 times)
- Earns 192,600 a year
50VP, WHO WANTS IT?
- I do not propose to be buried until I am really
dead. Daniel Webster during down the VP in 1840 - Once there were two brothers. One ran away to
sea the other was elected VP of the U.S. and
nothing was heard of either of them again.
Thomas Marshall (Woodrow Wilson, 1913-21) - .like a man in a cataleptic fit, he cannot
speak, he cannot move, he suffers no pain. He is
perfectly conscious of all that goes on, but has
no part in it. - I believe Im entitled to make a few remarks
because Im about to enter a 4 year period of
silence. Charles Dawes (Calvin Coolidge,
1925-29) - The job.is not worth a pitcher of warm piss.
John Garner (Franklin Roosevelt, 1933-41) - Standby equipment Nelson Rockefeller (Gerald
Ford, 1975) -
51THANKS, BUT NO THANKS(2004 CAMPAIGN)
- I spent several years in a North Viet Nam prison
camp, in the dark, fed with scraps. Do you think
I want to do that all over again as Vice
President? John McCain, Senator, Arizona - I would not accept it at gunpoint. Bill
Richardson, Governor, New Mexico
52THE VICE PRESIDENT
- Constitutional provision
- Evolution of the position
- Historys notables
53THE LAUNCHING PAD?
- 14 vice presidents have advanced from their
positions to the presidency. - John Adams, 1796
- Thomas Jefferson, 1800
- Teddy Roosevelt, 1904
- Lyndon Johnson, 1963
- Richard Nixon, 1968
- Gerald Ford, 1974
- George Bush, 1988
54CABINET
- Departments State (1789), Treasury (1789),
Defense (1947, War, 1789, Navy 1798), Justice
(1789), Interior (1849), Agriculture (1889),
Commerce (1889), Labor (1913), Health Human
Resources (1953), Housing Urban Development
(1965), Transportation (1966), Energy (1977),
Education (1979), Veterans Affairs (1989) and - Homeland Security (2003)
55NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
- Purpose Advise and assist President on National
and Foreign security matters
56CHECKS AND BALANCES
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58CONGRESSIONAL CHECKS
- War Powers Act (1974) President may send troops
into hostile action for 60 days notifying
Congress within 48 hours - Case Act (Executive Agreements) President must
notify Congress within hours - The Budget and Impoundment Control Act (1974)
- President may delay spending unless
forbidden by Congress - To terminate a program he must seek
congressional approval within 45 days
59IMPEACHMENTS
60IMPEACHMENT, THE PROCESS
- House member/committee requests an impeachment
inquiry - Judicial Committee investigates to determine if
evidence is sufficient - Judicial Committee conducts investigation,
develops and votes on articles - House of Representatives considers and votes on
Articles of Impeachment (majority vote) - Senate tries the accused as a jury of 100 with a
team of House members prosecuting. - President is represented by his/her own legal
team - Chief Justice presides
- 2/3 vote for conviction by the Senate and removal
from office - The president, members of congress and judges may
be impeached
61THE INFAMOUS 2.5
- 1868 Andrew Johnson
- 1975 Richard Nixon
- 1998 Bill Clinton
- Impeached by the House and resigned.
62RICHARD M. NIXON
- Watergate scandal-the break-in and subsequent
cover-up - Executive privilege-maintaining the tapes
- House articles-three approved for impeachment
(summer, 1974) - Obstruction of justice, abuse of power, contempt
of congress - Within weeks Nixons resignation
63ASSASSINATIONS ATTEMPTS
64ASSASSINATIONS
- 1865 Abraham Lincoln
- 1881 James Garfield
- 1901 William McKinley
- 1963 John Kennedy
65ATTEMPTS
- 1835 Andrew Jackson
- 1912 Teddy Roosevelt
- 1950 Harry Truman
- 1975 Gerald Ford (twice)
- 1981 Ronald Reagan
- Teddy Franklin Roosevelt
- The only President shot that survived.
66RANKINGS
- Ridings McIver, Murray, CSPAN etal.
- Lincoln preservation of the Union
- FDR Great Depression and World War II
- Washington establishing a national gov.
- Jefferson Declaration of Independence and
Louisiana Purchase - T. Roosevelt environmental protections
67FROM FIRST TO WORST
- Warren Harding, 1920
- Ulysses Grant, 1868
- James Buchanan, 1856
- Franklin Pierce, 1852
- Andrew Johnson, 1865
68NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
- Theodore Roosevelt (1906) various peace treaties
- Woodrow Wilson (1919) League of Nations
- Jimmy Carter (2002) international peace work
69 THE LAST TEN
(1953-present)
- Dwight Eisenhower-retired general
- John Kennedy-House/Senate
- Lyndon Johnson-House/Senate/VP
- Richard Nixon-House/VP
- Gerald Ford-House/VP
- Jimmy Carter-Governor
- Ronald Reagan-Governor
- George Bush-House/VP
- Bill Clinton-Governor
- George W. Bush-Governor