Chapter 14 The Presidency in Action - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 14 The Presidency in Action

Description:

Chapter 14 The Presidency in Action AP Government April 2006 7th Hour Brittany Hughes, Kate Terry, Nikki Simon, Quinn Landers Article II of the Constitution Executive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:844
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: loizzoCom
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 14 The Presidency in Action


1
Chapter 14The Presidency in Action
AP Government April 2006 7th Hour Brittany
Hughes, Kate Terry, Nikki Simon, Quinn Landers
2
Article II of the ConstitutionExecutive article
  • "The executive power of the United States shall
    be vested in a President of the United States of
    America."

3
Strength of the Presidency
  • The Presidency has grown substantually over the
    course of our nation's history.
  • We have a need for more from the Federal
    Government, that requires administration by the
    President
  • We have a need for a leader in times of national
    emergency.
  • The President can rally public support behind a
    cause

4
Stewardship theory
  • The main view used by many of the stronger
    presidents to justify using that power, making it
    his duty to do all he can for the American people.

5
The Presidents Powers
The President's chief job is to execute and
administer the laws of the United States. He must
execute all laws no matter his views, but he can
execute them in varying levels in which he see
fit. He also has a lot of room to interpret some
of the broad written laws by Congress in the way
he sees best.
6
Ordinance power
  • In order for the President to accomplish his
    tasks, he needs the power to give orders. While
    not expressly stated in the constitution, the
    ordinance power allows the President to issue
    executive orders to accomplish his administrative
    tasks.

7
  • More and more discretion has been granted to the
    President and the executive branch to make these
    decisions, due to the wide scope of things
    Congress regulates, they cannot be experts on
    everything.

8
Appointment power
  • The scope of the job that the executive branch
    has cannot be accomplished by one man alone, and
    the constitution allows for him to appoint others
    to help him.

9
Positions President appoints
  • Cabinet members and their top aides
  • Ambassadors and diplomats
  • Federal judges, US marshalls, and attorneys
  • Head of independent agencies like
  • NASA
  • EPA

10
  • All appointments require approval by the Senate
    of a simple majority.
  • The unwritten rule of senatorial courtesy, where
    if the senator of the state where the appointee
    will serve in a state specific appointment, will
    accept the appointee, the senate will as well.

11
  • However, the vast majority of Federal employees
    are chosen through civil servant examinations.

12
Removal Power
  • The power to remove undesirable officeholders
    from the executive branch is also essential to
    the power of the President. How this should occur
    has been debated through our history however.

13
Johnson impeachment trial
  • Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act to try
    to keep President Andrew Johnson from removing
    any of Lincoln's cabinet, but he ignores the law
    and fires Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. He is
    impeached but is aquitted, and the law is
    repealed in 1887.

14
Myers v. United States
  • Woodrow Wilson at the end of his term, and
    without consulting the senate, removed Frank
    Myers as the postmaster of Portland, Oregon, in
    violation of a law passed in 1876. The Supreme
    Court found that the law was unconstitutional and
    held that the power of removal was an essential
    part of the executive power.

15
Humphrey's Executor v. United States
  • After winning office in 1933, Roosevelt removed
    Henry Humphrey for a seven year term in the FTC,
    giving no valid reason for doing so. The Supreme
    Court found that Humphrey had been unfairly
    removed because this was an independent
    regulatory agency, with Congress having some
    control and therefore the charter set up by
    Congress applied.

16
Diplomatic and Military Powers
  • Power to make treaties
  • Formal agreements between two states
  • Senate must approve by 2/3 vote
  • President ratifies
  • Congress can repeal a treaty by passing a law,
    and a treaty can overturn an old law
  • Treaties cannot conflict with the Constitution

17
Executive Agreements
  • Pact between the President and the head of a
    foreign state
  • Do not require Senate consent
  • Destroyers for bases deal of 1940

18
The Power of Recognition
  • To recognize a country is to acknowledge the
    legal existence of that country and its
    government.
  • Does not mean approval ex. China
  • Can be used as a weapon
  • T. Roosevelt recognized Panama, ensuring success
    against Colombia
  • Truman recognized Israel
  • May ask for the recall of a nations ambassador
    (persona non grata)

19
Commander in Chief
  • Article II, Section 2, Clause 1 makes the
    President commander in chief of nations armed
    forces
  • Powers are almost without limit
  • Designates authority to military subordinates,
    but not required to do so
  • George Washington led troops in Whiskey Rebellion
  • Abe Lincoln instructed generals in the field
  • Most critical decisions are made by President

20
Making War
  • Can use armed forces without a declaration of war
    by Congress (undeclared war)
  • Ex. John Adams, Jefferson and Madison (Barbary
    coast pirates), Korea, Vietnam
  • Congress has not declared war since WWII
  • Has enacted joint resolutions to authorize the
    President to meet certain international crises
    with military force
  • Ex. George W. Bush in the War in Iraq, George
    H.W. Bush in the Persian Gulf War, Lyndon Johnson
    in Vietnam

21
The War Powers Resolution
  • Passed by Congress in 1973
  • Nixon vetoed the measure, but Congress overrode
    the veto
  • Provisions
  • Within 48 hrs. of sending troops abroad, the
    President must report to Congress
  • Combat commitment must end within 60 days, unless
    Congress agrees to a longer period.
  • Congress may end the combat commitment at any
    time, by passing a concurrent resolution

22
Legislative and Judicial Powers
  • Recommending Legislation (message power)
  • Three messages a year to Congress
  • State of the Union
  • The Presidents budget
  • Annual Economic Report
  • Sends other messages to call on Congress to enact
    those laws he believes necessary to the welfare
    of the country

23
The Veto Power
  • Four options when receiving a bill
  • Can sign the bill, making it a law
  • Can veto it, returning it to Congress
  • Can allow the bill to become a law by not signing
    it or vetoing it within 10 days
  • Can pocket veto, only if Congress adjourns within
    10 days and the President does not act on it
    measure dies
  • 2/3 majority needed to override a veto is
    difficult to obtain and the threat can often
    defeat a bill

24
The Line-Item Veto
  • Cannot veto only a portion of the bill
  • Presidents since Ulysses Grant have argued that
    they should be able to veto specific dollar
    amounts in spending bills
  • Opponents argue that this would give the
    President too much power (amendment has failed)
  • 1996 Congress passed Line Veto Act
  • Gave President power to reject individual items
    in spending bills and to eliminate any provision
    of a tax bill that benefited less than 100 people
  • Struck down by Clinton vs. New York City in 1998

25
Other Legislative Powers
  • Article II, Section 3
  • Can call Congress into a special session
  • Ex. Truman had Congress consider post-WWII
    economic measures
  • Can adjourn Congress whenever the two houses
    cannot agree on a date for their adjournment
  • Never used

26
Judicial Powers
  • Reprieve postponement of the execution of a
    sentence
  • Pardon legal forgiveness of a crime
  • Two powers are absolute, except in cases of
    impeachment, where they may not be granted
  • Considered powers of clemency, can only be used
    in cases involving federal offenses
  • Can grant after trial, after or before they are
    charged
  • Ex. Ford pardoned Nixon before he was charged
  • Must be accepted by the person it is granted
  • Can be conditional

27
Pardons contd.
  • Commutation the power to reduce the length of a
    sentence or a fine imposed by a court
  • Amnesty a blanket pardon offered to a group of
    law violators.
  • Ex. Carter granted amnesty to Vietnam War draft
    evaders.

28
Sources
  • AP Government Book
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com