Title: President and Prime Minister
1President and Prime Minister
2Nations with Prime Minister Systems
- Red-pure systems
- Yellow and greenadapted systems
3 Shinzo Abe
Manmohan Singh
Benjamin Netanyahu
David Cameron
4Origins of Prime Minister
- Robert Walpole, 1721
- De facto
- King George
- Absenteeism
- No interest
- No English!
5Modern Prime Minister system
- Benjamin Disraeli
- 1868
- 1874-1880
- Adopted as Official Title
- in 1905
- First among equals
6Chairman or Chief?
- Chairmanfacilitator of government
- Chiefforceful leader of government, leader of
policy agenda
7Presidential Systems--blue
8Enrique Pen?a Nieto
Barack Obama
Dilma Rouseff
Goodluck Jonathan
Hassan Rouhani
9Origins of Presidential System
10Hamiltons Federalist Papers67-77
11Federalist Number 69
- Four year term, elected not hereditary
- Limited length of term
- Can be removed through impeachment
- Congress can override veto
- Commander-in-chief only of those in service
- Cant dissolve Congress
- Treaties must be approved by Senate
- In short, a president like the governor of New
York, not like a king
12Federalist Number 70
- Need for energy in the executive
- a feeble executive implies feeble execution of
the government - Unity in the executive
- Limited length of terms
- Adequate support
- Competent powers
- But safety against a tyrant
13Clerk or StewardRichard Neustadt
14- Theodore Roosevelt took the view that the
President as a "steward of the people" should
take whatever action necessary for the public
good unless expressly forbidden by law or the
Constitution." I did not usurp power," he wrote,
"but I did greatly broaden the use of executive
power. whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/theodorero
osevelt - Taft recognized that his techniques would differ
from those of his predecessor. Unlike Roosevelt,
Taft did not believe in the stretching of
Presidential powers. He once commented that
Roosevelt "ought more often to have admitted the
legal way of reaching the same ends.
whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/williamhowardtaft
15Churchill and FDR
16Bush, Blair, and Iraq
17Obama and Peña Nieto
18Obama and Netanyahu
19 Parliamentary System Presidential System
Legislative Branch Parliament elected by voters. The majority party in Parliament chooses the prime minister. Congress elected by voters. Legislative and executive functions are separate.
Chief Executive(Government Head) Prime minister who heads council of ministers, or "Cabinet" President, elected by voters, nominates cabinet members.
Head of State Often a constitutional monarch. Legislatures often choose a ceremonial president, who acts as head of state. President is head of state.
Elections Prime minister can call new elections. Held at fixed intervals.
Political Parties Often a multiparty system. Government is formed by a ruling coalition of cooperating parties. Usually a two-party system with third parties holding marginal power.
Examples Israel, Great Britain, and her former colonies, such as India, Japan. The United States, Mexico, Nigeria and Brazil.
20Presidential System Advantages
- Separation of Powers/Checks and Balances
- Direct Mandate
- Executive authority/decisive authority
- Stability
21Presidential System Disadvantages
- Independent power can lead to authoritarianism
- Separation of Powers/Gridlock
- Difficulty in leadership change
22Prime Minister System Advantages
- Quicker Legislative Action
- Collective Cabinet Authoritydiversity in
leadership - Flexibility in Change of Powervotes of no
confidence - Resistance to authoritarianism
23Prime Minister System Disadvantages
- Indirect election of prime minister
- No separation of powersexecutive authority less
checked - No single executivefirst among equals
- One party dominance
- Potential instability