Title: PSC 313 Major Course Themes
1PSC 313 Major Course Themes
- 1.) Gap between roles/responsibilities/expectation
s and power to carry them out how do presidents
resolve this? - a.) informal powers
- b.) increase resources (build up institutional
presidency) - c.) politicize the bureaucracy
- d.) work on increasing legal powers
- 2.) Fiction of individual president governing
vs. reality of institutional presidency - 3.) Does history make the person, or does the
person make history?
2THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION DESIGNING THE
PRESIDENCY
- Two influences
- 1.) colonial experience---executives bad
- 2.) Confederation experience---executives weak
- Stages of Convention
- a.) Virginia Plan
- b.) Committee of Detail
- c.) Committee on Postponed Matters
- d.) Committee of Style
- Much of presidential material was decided
relatively late!
3BIG STRUCTURAL ISSUES
- Strong executive faction vs. weak executive
faction---in most cases, the strong exec guys won - 1.) Unitary vs. plural
- 2.) Selection, re-electability, and term length
- a.) rejection of popular election
- b.) vacillation on legislative selection
- c.) Electoral college proposed by CPM
- (pre-XIIth Amendment EC)
- ---perfect compromise or Rube-Goldberg-like
mishmash? - d.) the complex intertwining of selection
method, term length, and re-electablity
4STRUCTURAL ISSUES CONTINUED
- 3.) Impeachment
- Whats an impeachable offense?
- 4.) Disability/Death/Resignation
- In case of the removal of the president from
office, or his death, resignation, or inability
to discharge the powers and duties of the said
office, the same shall devolve on the Vice
Presidentand such officer shall act accoridngly,
until the Disability be removed, or a President
shall be elected - 5.) Complete Separation from Legislature
- --no simultaneous service
- --separate ballot, different election cycles
5PRESIDENTIAL POWERS IN THE CONSTITUTION
- Enumerated Powers
- (compare to status quo under Articles)
- 1.) Veto
- 2.) Commander-in-Chief
- 3.) Require the opinions of the principal
officers - 4.) Pardon
- 5.) Makin treaties
- 6.) Appointments
- 7.) State of the Union (shall? may? must?)
- 8.) Convene Congress (adjourn in very limited
cases?) - 9.) Receive Ambassadorsnarrow and broad interp
6PRESIDENTIAL POWERS IN THE CONSTITUTION
- Implied/Unenumerated Powers
- Three theories about implied powers Taft, TR,
Lincoln - Supposed sources of implied powers
- A.) Vestment clauses (compare Pres. w. Cong)
- B.) Take care clause
- C.) Oath of office
7RANDOM CONSTITUTIONAL STUFF
- 1.) Qualifications for presidency age,
residency, natural-born citizenship - 2.) Vice-Presidency was a fix for 3 problems
- a.) what to do if president died or was disabled
- b.) give meaning to the second vote for
president in the EC (consolation prize) - c.) difficulties with Senator presiding over
Senate
8RANDOM CONSTITUTIONAL STUFF CONTINUED
- 3.) Presidency Issues in the Ratification Debate
- a.) The Federalist Papers (pro-ratification)---co
mpares presidency favorably to British monarch - B.) Letters of Cato (anti-ratification)---compare
s presidency unfavorably to current state
governorships
9THE 19th CENTURY PRESIDENCY
- Precedents set by George Washington
- 1.) Accessible and popular but not a popular
leader in modern sense - 2.) Promoted theory of sole presidential removal
power - 3.) Reserved veto for constitutional issues, not
policy disagreements - 4.) Issues with advise and consent clause
- 5.) Unilateral proclamation of neutrality in
1793 - 6.) Unilateral recognition of French
Revolutionary govenrment - 7.) Federalized (and personally commanded) state
militias to deal with internal rebellion - 8.) First claim of executive privilege
- 9.) Avoided direct involvement in legislative
process - 10.) Government of gentlemen approach to
political appointments
1019th CENTURY PRESIDENCY
- 1.) Screwed-up presidential elections of 1796
and 1800, led to 12th Amendment - 2.) Jefferson (1801-1809) policy and style
changes but no reduction in presidents role - --party leadership in Congress
- --Louisiana purchase
- --enforcement of Embargo
- 3.) Madison (1809-1817) emergence of dominant
Congress, War of 1812, breakdown of first party
system - 4.) Monroe (1817-1825) passive on domestic
policy, established Monroe doctrine
1119th CENTURY PRESIDENCY
- 1824 another screwed-up election
- JACKSON (1829-1837)---a paradoxical president
- ---Emergence of Second Party System
- ---First use of veto for policy reasons
- ---Asserted presidential control over bureaucracy
- ---Spoils/patronage system enhance or reduce
presdiential power?
1219th Century Presidency
- JAMES K. POLK (1845-1849)--Dark horse
one-termer increasingly regionally
factionalized Democrat Party--Aggressive
territorial expansion policywhy? - --First clearly presidentially-initiated
war--Rare president with extensive legislative
experience - --First president to attempt centralized
budgetary clearance - Young Hickory strong presidency within a
smaller Federal government (reduced tariff)
13LINCOLN
- Constitutional dictator or cautious ex-Whig?
- --April 1861 spending without congressional
appropriations, suspending habeas corpus (and
authorizing military trials for draft resisters),
mail censorship, naval blockade of Southern ports - --Ex parte Merryman (1861), Prize Cases (1863),
Ex parte Milligan (1866)
14LINCOLN contd
- ---Election of 1864
- ---Emancipation Proclamationbased on
Commander-in-Chief power - Congress strikes back Andrew Johnsons
near-removal
15The Relevance of 19th Century Presidents for
political scientists
- Can todays presidents learn anything from
pre-modern presidents?1.) Neustadt no ---
modern presidency is qualitatively different2.)
Skorownek yes American political history is
cyclical - Presidencies of reconstruction ? articulation ?
disjunction, interrupted by presidencies of
pre-emption
16Progressive/Populist Movements(and how they
changed presidency)
- Twin evils business monopoly and state and
local political machines (how related, how alike) - BTW, why called machines?
- Mechanisms of machine control (mostly legal at
the time) - a.) ballots printed and distributed by party
- b.) SFR method of nominationc.)
patronage/spoils system - d.) non-competitive contracting
- e.) welfare-like services to poor and immigrants
17Progressive/Populist Movements
- Major principles of Pop/Prog Movements
Democratization, Depoliticization, Optimism about
Govt. - Specific reform goals
- 1.) government regulation and/or breakup of
monopolies - 2.) increased govt. health/safety
legislation/regulation - 3.) Australian ballot (ballot reform)
- 4.) Primary elections instead of SFRs for
nominations - 5.) Nonpartisan elections (in local govts.),
manager/council form of govt. - 6.) Competitive bidding for govt. contracts
- 7.) Civil service (merit) system for awarding
govt. jobs - Garfield assassination key to passing Pendleton
Act - 8.) Bigger govt. role in social
welfare----benefits as entitlements rather than
political favors
18Populist/Progressive Movements
- 9.Idealization of the Executive
- ---executive more democratic, better rep. of the
people rather than special interests, less
corruptible - ---executive more professional streamlined,
organized, scientific
19Populist/Progressive Movements
- Pops and Progs infiltration of the two major
parties produced - 1.) Teddy Roosevelt (R, 1901-1909)
- --mixed Hamiltonianism and Jeffersonianism
- --Square Deal Hepburn Act, Expansion of civil
service, Conservation, Pure Food and Drug Act - --used muckrakers as allies
- 2.) Woodrow Wilson (D, 1913-1921)
- --Party-centered progressivism idealized
contemporary British parliamentary system - --Popular president could overcome separation of
powers - --New Freedom creation of Federal Researve
System, creation of FTC, Clayton Anti-Trust Act
20IRONY OF POPULIST/PROGESSIVES IMPACT ON
PRESIDENCY
- Although they intended to empower the president,
some specific reforms weakened the president
politically - ---Australian ballot led to split ticket voting
- ---Primary elections led to more challenges to
renomination - ---Merit system reduced control over bureaucracy
- ---Merit system and competitive bidding reduced
political resources - LED TO INCREASING EXPECTATIONS GAP