Chapter 11 (The President)I.Presidential Power (apart from the.ppt
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1、Chapter 11 (The President) I. Presidential Power (apart from the powers in the constitution, the U.S. President has informal powers associated with his rise as a status symbol); many roles A. Symbolic President (Head of State) The ultimate symbol of American Politics (more media coverage than anyone
2、 else). B. Managing Crises It seems that the American public looks to the president for comfort and security during times of crisis (Reagan and the Challenger explosion; FDR and great depression). C. Providing Policy Leadership Most policy initiatives originate in the executive branch. Also, he/she
3、will mobilize political support, rally public opinion, lobby members of Congress, use veto threats, and so on. D. Managing the Economy They are held responsible (Hoover 1932; Ford 1976; Carter 1980, Bush 1992) for bad economic times, whether they should be or not. E. Managing the Government (2.8 mil
4、lion bureaucrats); president is ultimately responsible for policy implementation/execution. F. Global President The “voice” for the U.S. internationally is the president. President orders troops to their deaths; Presidents control the nuclear arsenal; these contribute to the worldwide image that the
5、 President of U.S. is the most powerful person.,II. Constitutional Powers of the President A. Who? Article II, Section 1; he must be Natural Born citizen 35 years old or older resident of U.S. for at least 14 years 1951: Can serve no more than 2 terms according to the 22 amendment (or one full term
6、if a vp must complete more than two years of a previous pres) B. Presidential Succession (what happens if the President is physically unable to serve?); order of succession Table 11.3 Disability? - 25th amendment (1967) states that the president will be replaced if the VP and a majority of the cabin
7、et write Congress of the presidents incapacity to govern. The President can appeal formally and resume powers if the VP and a majority of the cabinet cant maintain sufficient opposition formally within 4 days. Congress can decide to replace him after the final formal declaration if 2/3s of the house
8、s agree within 21 days to remove him.,C. Impeachment House brings charges (articles of impeachment). Senate must try the impeachment. 2/3s members Chief Justice presides over trial D. Presidential Pardons he can pardon anyone for any reason. E. Executive Power to some extent, the power of the pres d
9、epends upon his/her self-understanding of their constitutional role as President. They may take one of three views of the office: Tafts restrictive view - the president ought not act unless specifically authorized by the Constitution or Congress. Roosevelts expansive view the President can act in an
10、y way that is not specifically restricted to him by Congress or the Constitution. This has been the most common view. Lincolns conditional view the president is restricted to specific authorizations UNLESS he is presiding during a period of national crisis.,F. Examples of expansive presidential view
11、: Jefferson and the Louisiana Purchase; he bought it without Congressional authorization. Lincoln and the blockade, martial law, Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln argued that he must put aside constitutional concerns in order to secure the nation. “Was it possible to lose the nation yet preserve th
12、e Constitution?” F.D. Roosevelt and the incarceration of Japanese-American citizens subsequent to Pearl Harbor and closing banks; FDR forced thousands of Japanese Americans to leave their homes/businesses until FDR was confident that they were not threats to national security (spies). All of the abo
13、ve are examples of presidents acting either without constitutional/congressional authorization or perhaps even beyond constitutional limits (Lincoln). G. Checking Presidential Power Though enjoyed great deference, the Presidents power even in the name of security has not been treated as absolute (Bu
14、shs unqualified detentions of alleged military combatants at Gitmo reversed by S.C.),H. Executive Privilege - Self-declared Pres right to withhold executive branch communications. Congress has never recognized it as a right. The Supreme Court has largely stayed out of the dispute, but has ruled that
15、 the President enjoys no such privilege during a criminal investigation. I. Presidential Impoundment - Impoundment is when a President refuses to spend money appropriated by Congress. The Budget and Impoundment Control Act (1974) requires that a President must spend all of the money unless he/she ca
16、n convince Congress of a list of items to be postponed or cancelled. J. Congressional Tilt - Congress generally gets the last word according to the Constitution. “Congress is constitutionally positioned to dominate American government. But it is the president who politically dominates the nations pu
17、blic affairs.”,III. Political Resources (informal powers) of the President A. Presidential Popularity drops with: (next slide) Scandals (except for Clinton!) recessions (Bush, Sr. 37% from 89% at the end of the Gulf War) War gone bad B. Access to Media (unlimited/immediate) call press conferences an
18、d speak to the nation to mobilize support IV. Chief Executive (weakened President) Constitutional executive - Congress is heavily involved in the Presidents business through appropriating funds and overseeing executive agencies (oversight committees). Executive Orders direct order by president (no n
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