AP Government and Politics - "The Executive Branch: Article II"
Governor Morris of Pennsylvania
"Make him too weak: the legislature will usurp his powers. Make him too strong: he will usurp on the legislature"
Popular leader (FDR)
"Preeminently a place of moral leadership"
First Lady
-Ceremonial duties (Turkey) -East Wing (Charity)
State
-Foreign Service -Passport and Visa Office -Bureau of African Affairs
Health and Human Services
-Public Health Service -Social Security Administration -FDA
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
-budget (to be matched with Congress's_ -Monitor Congressional Spending -Reorganize the Bureacracy -Vetting Cabinet Appointees -over 500 employees = most career civil servants (bipartisan)
Commander-in-chief
-civilian control of the military (26/46 = military experience) -assignment of troops with congressional declaration of war -assignment of troops without formal declaration of war (War Powers Act)- not viewed as legitimate by presidents ("not because of War Powers Act" at end of letters)
Vice President
-constitutional duties (President of Senate- not a priority) -Presidential duties
Electoral College (How does it work?)
-each state elects a number of representatives to the Electoral College equal to the number Congress members (2 Senators + # House of representatives) -538 electors = 270 votes for president to win -few weeks after general election, meets in State capitals and casts official vote -President of Senate announces presidency on January 6th
Chief of Staff
-organizes staff -controls access to president -policy push with Congress -goes everywhere with president
Press Secretary
-press briefings/conferences --can answer as many or as little questions about president and topics
Chief of state
-representative of the nation -symbol of America -hosts distinguished guests -can sign a bill, decide NCCW, whenever!
Popular Leader
-role model -teacher (explaining why things are happening) -restores domestic Tranquility in crisis (should we be frightened or are we safe?) -economic manager even though Congress manages money -speaks for all of America (president fails = criticism)
Party Leader
-shapes party platform (reshapes party beliefs to match theirs) -expectation of loyalty from party members -campaigning for party candidates -mobilization of public opinion
Chief legislator
-state of the union address -recommends bills to Congress for action (President can not introduce bills) -presentation of annual budget -calling special sessions of Congress -let's time for adjournment when Houses disagree (not constitutionally used) -power to veto Congressional bills (regular and pocket)
Chief Executive/Administrator
-takes care that laws be enforced -head of executive bureaucracy -implementation of policies through executive orders -impoundment of funds -appointment and removal of major executive officials -unlimited authority in granting pardons, reprieves, and commutation -use of executive privilege (rarely used)
White House Office Staff (WHO)
1. Advises president 2. creates policy options 3. organizes information 4. writes speeches 5. organize schedule 6. control access to President
Homeland Security
1. Coast Guard 2. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) 3. Secret Service (mainly for finding counterfeit money (Department of Treasury) but also for protecting president) 4. Customs Service
Defense
1. Department of the Navy 2.Joint Chiefs of Staff
Labor
1. Employment Standards Administration 2. Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Energy
1. Fossil Energy
Housing and Urban Development
1.Agency for Community Planning and Development 2.Bureau of the Census
Eeducation
1.Assistant Secretary for Secondary Education 2.Faith-Based & Community Initiatives
Treasury
1.Bureau of Printing and Engraving
Justice
1.Drug Enforcement Agency 2.Antitrust Division 3.Civil Rights Division
Interior
1.Environmental Protection Agency 2. National Park Service 3. Bureau of Indian Affairs
Agriculture
1.Forest Service 2.Soil Conservation Service 3.Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion
Transportation
1.National Highway Traffic Safety Administration 2.Federal Aviation Administration
Commerce
1.Office of Innovation and Improvement 2.National Bureau of Standards 3.Patents and Trademarks Office
Andrew Jackson
1829-1837 -wanted to maximize the powers of the presidency
Franklin D. Roosevelt
1937-present -began what we consider the modern presidency -popular perception of the President as the center of the government
Treaty
A formal agreement between two or more sovereign states -approval of 2/3 Senate to be ratified -in Constitution
ad hoc structure (Clinton)
A method of organizing a president's staff in which several task forces, committees, and informal groups of friends and advisers deal directly with the president. -groups were dynamic as things were completed (figure heads in charge changed that reported to president)
Executive Office of the President (EOP)
A mini-bureaucracy created in 1939 to help the president oversee the executive branch bureaucracy. -Brownlow Commission -expands executive bureaucracy to help carry out laws
Legislative Vetoes
A procedure that allows one or both houses of Congress to reject an action taken by the president or an executive agency. In 1983 the Supreme Court declared legislative vetoes unconstitutional, but Congress continues to enact legislation incorporating the veto.
Beauracracy
A set of complex hierarchical departments, agencies, commissions, and staff that exist to help a chief executive officer carry out his or her duties. May be private organizations or governmental units
-direct, only important information -quick -better collaboration/specialization
Advantages of pyramidal structures
Department of Defense
Advice and execution of military actions
Department of Justice
Advise on legal matters
Office of Policy Development
Advises the Presdietn on domestic policy matters -policy issues--> writes up bills sometimes
22nd Amendment
Amendment that created a 2 term limit on presidents. -caps presidency to ten years
Office of Management and Budget
An office that prepares the president's budget and also advises presidents on proposals from departments and agencies and helps review their proposed regulations.
peaceful transfer of power with president and successor having breakfast before oath
Another thing that first presidents did that set the stage of legitimacy in America?
EOP employees (1573 employees- $92 million)
Appointed by the President with Senate Approval
Parliamentary system
Choose cabinet from inside the legislature (cabinet ministers) Always have a unified (same political party for executive and legislative branches)
-quick -many perspectives -presidents get all information -one team, no rank
Circular system advantages
-overwhelm president with all information -no matter rank, all people can go (ex: low level stuff) -Jealousy competing for face-to-face time with president
Circular system disadvantages
the Cabinet
Collectively a weak body that has a tradition of fighting and competition
State Dining Room and Oval office
Come from tax dollars -when President is working
1. military power can overpower states to make him/herself king 2. President can be used by the Senate (minions/favorities) and vice versa (treaties) 3. Bribery to ensure reelection
Concerns of the Founders
20th Amendment
Congress begins on January 30th; President starts on January 20th (originally around March 4th) "Lame-duck" Amendment
Prime ministers
Consequences if they do not follow political party
-Natural born -35 y/o -14 years resident of the USA
Constitutional Qualifications to Run for President -eligibility clause
Department of Interior
Control of public land and natural resources
Department of Homeland Security
Coordination of our nation's intelligence
25th Amendment
DISABILITY 1) Succession of VP if president dies or become incapable to do his job.(2) if there is no VP, president must appoint one, and congress must approve
23rd Amendment (1961)
District of Columbia receives electoral votes -3 Electors (based if they were representative in Congress)
No (President can hire and fire; hired based on trust, loyalty, and propinquity)
Does the WHO need Senate Conformation?
correct but not close (few vetoes)
During the time of the first presidents, Congress was ______ but _______
Keep secret from Congress/judiciary for national security threat (leverage for president)
Example of President using executive privilege
$500 or higher
Federal grant
chief executive
Few issues inspired as much debate as defining the ________ for the Framers
executive agreements
Formal government agreement entered into by the president that does not require the advice and consent of the U.S. Senate.
Department of Education
Formulation and administration of federal assistance to schools
Department of State
Formulation and execution of foreign policy
Department of Veterans Affairs
Formulation and operation of programs to benefit veterans and their families
Department of Energy
Formulation of a national energy plan
Department of the Treasury
Formulation of economic, financial, tax, and fiscal policies
Department of Housing and Urban Department
Formulation of policies concerning housing needs and community development
Department of Labor
Formulation of policies promoting the welfare of wage earners
Department of Health and Human Services
Formulation of policies protecting the health and welfare of all citizens
Department of Agriculture
Formulation of policies to maintain farm incomes and expand markets for goods
Department of Transportation
Formulation of transportation policies
anarchy; monarchy
Framers feared of ______ (too weak) and ______ (too strong) in equal measure when developing a chief executive position
Reconstruction
From ________ to ______, Congress was the principal federal institution (not during war time)
no
Has any president been elected in their 30s?
-term limits (George Washington set stigma of two terms) -minimal activism (no political parties) -appointment (simple qualifications) -modesty (greeting all Americans)
How did the first presidents give legitimacy to the government?
half of Cabinet and VP write letter to Congress for approval to strip president of powers
How is a president declared long term disabled?
500 ($35.4 million)
How many employees are in WHO?
26 of 46
How many presidents have military experience?
two (Buchanan/Cleveland)
How many presidents have not been married at the time of their presidency?
two (JFK and Biden)
How many presidents were not protestant? -Catholic
12 (more than all presidents before him combined)
How many vetoes did Jackson make? -did not like shrinking to Congress
two; consitutionality
How many vetoes did Washington make and why?
very little
How personally does the president know his cabinet secretaries?
based on the order of the establishment of each department
How was the order determined for the Presidential Succession Act of 1947?
Johnson, Clinton, Trump (twice)
Impeachment with Conviction -none convicted
Lincoln
Implied powers as commander-in-chief -did things without Congress approval because of war time
Council of Economic Advisors
Information on the the state of the economy and writes economic messages to Congress and the public -writes presidential speeches on economics for president -advice
NO
Is the cabinet mentioned in the Constitution besides the 25th Amendment?
No (weak body in giving advice to the president - tradition)
Is the cabinet the president's closest advisors?
NO
Is the president required to have or even keep a cabinet
Executive orders
Issued because the presidents main responsibility is enforcement of laws
to expand and grow department
Job of advisors president hires?
-chief of staff -press secretary -vice president -first lady
Key Individuals of WHO
Hatch Act
Law enacted in 1939 to prohibit civil servants from taking activist roles in partisan campaigns. This act prohibited federal employees from making political contributions, working for a particular party, or campaigning for a particular candidate.
Presidents
No consequences if they do not follow political party
Regroup after Jackson when Congress remerges
No name presidents -only in for one term
Presidential football (and biscuit)
Nuclear codes that President holds as a result of the chief executive/administrator role
protocol and succession (keeps fighting at a minimum)
Only important part of cabinet?
-VP -Speaker -President Pro Tempore -Secretary of State -etc.
Order of the Presidential Succession Act of 1947
War Powers Act
Passed by Congress in 1973; the president is limited in deploying troops overseas to a sixty-day period in peacetime (which can be extended for an extra thirty days to permit withdrawal) unless Congress explicitly gives its approval for a longer period. -Congress funds
Fancy food; utilities (electric, gas, water, etc.)
Payed out of president's pocket
$499 or lower
Person gift for President
designated survivor
Person in line of succession chosen to not attend specific meetings and events to ensure continuance of government -during State of the Union
-not fully representative of peoples' votes -faithless electors -winner of popular vote is not winner of electoral college (5 times) -concentrated campaigning in large states
Present issues of the electoral college
Impoundment (Impoundment Control Act of 1974)
Presidential refusal to allow an agency to spend funds that Congress authorized and appropriated.
Nixon
Presidential resignation
$400,000/yr; $50,000
Presidential salary and amount of expense account
four years (two term limit)
Presidential term
Insiders (from parliament); outsides (former state governors or businessmen)
Prime ministers are ______. Presidents are ______.
-3/5 Compromise -23rd Amendment -12th Amendment
Problems with Electoral College: -popular representation and slaves -District of Columbia = no representation in Congress -voting pf the vice president (initially second place winner- 1796/1800 election = issues) Solutions?
Department of Commerce
Promotion of trade and technical advancement
Andrew Jackson
Refused to back down to Congress- "Tribune of the People" (Congress = very big headed too at the time)
Prime Ministers
Remain in power as long as his or her party maintains the majority in the legislature
electoral college
Representatives (equal to senators + representatives in Congress) of each state who cast the final ballots that actually elect a president.
single executive with significant powers
Result of Framer's debate of chief executive
executive order
Rule or regulation issued by the president that has the effect of law. All executive orders must be published in the Federal Register.
-eliminate electoral college (constitutional amendment) -pass law against against faithless electors (Washington state) -proportional vote (51% electors/49% electors) -elector votes based on congressional district, not winner takes all (Maine/Nebraska)
Solutions to present issues of electoral college
-plural executive -single executive with a council to check his powers -elective monarchy
Suggestions of Framers for chief Executove
presidents
Tend to outlast cabinet secretaries
first presidents
The Job of the _______ was to give legitimacy to the government.
cabinet
The formal body of presidential advisers who head the fifteen executive departments. Presidents often add others to this body of formal advisers.
Pardons
The government's authority (president in the federal government) to cancel someone's conviction of a crime by a court and eliminate all sanctions and punishments resulting from conviction.
issue networks
The loose and informal relationships that exist among a large number of actors who work in broad policy areas.
impeachment
The power delegated to the House of Representatives in the Constitution to charge the president, vice president, or other "civil officers," including federal judges, with "Treason, Bribery, or other High Crimes and Misdemeanors." This is the first step in the constitutional process of removing such government officials from office.
State of the Union Address
The president's annual statement to Congress and the nation. -role = chief legislator
Signing statement
The presidents beliefs on a law being passed and how they will enforce it
Iron Triangles
The relatively stable relationships and patterns of interaction that occur among an agency, interest groups, and congressional committees or subcommittees.
Chief Diplomat
The role of the president in recognizing foreign governments, making treaties, and effecting executive agreements. -makes President look strong
25th Amendment
Vice President succeeds President in case of removal from office or death
Parliamentary systems
What are most democracies in the world?
Residents (no cameras or secret service)
What are the top two floors of the White House for?
2/3
What fraction of presidents studied the same thing in college?
Congress reemerges
What happens during 1837-1937 after Andrew Jackson?
House chooses president (1 vote per state), Senate chooses Vice President
What happens if electoral college is tied?
-painting -tearing down every bed -all moved out -move in next family
What has to be done in four hours when one President is moved out and another is moved in?
large states
What kind of states did most presidents come from?
policy not constitutionality
What were Andrew Jackson's vetoes based on?
Legislature (insiders)
Who chooses prime ministers?
People from unrepresented groups (African Americans, Women, Hispanics, Disabled Community) -"Kitchen Cabinet"
Who else gets appointed for executive cabinet?
people of... -private businesses -universities -"think tanks" -law firms -umions -Congress ALL HAVE EXPERIENCE IN FIELD
Who gets appointed for executive cabinet?
FDR; Eisenhower
Who set the term limits after serving three four year terms? Who was the first president subject to term limits?
President (commander in chief)
Who takes over the government during war time?
Alexander Hamilton
Who wanted an elective monarchy?
George Washington had restraint and did not seek power
Why did the Framer's develop such a strong executive even though they are fearful of one?
Better success if they are elected into office for political agenda
Why is it important that the President as the Party Leader campaigns for party candidates?
1. president's can only appoint 1% of cabinet department (president doesn't hire, president can't fire- not a lot of control over career civil servants that may not be supportive of the president= contention) 2. advice may be skewed based on the needs of the department 3. propinquity (those closest to president = most influential)
Why is the cabinet as a group of advisors weak?
National Security Council
a committee in the executive branch of government that advises the president on foreign and military and national security
executive agreement
an agreement between the president and the leader of another country -binding -not approval of Congress, only notification -partially radical
plural executive
an executive branch in which power is fragmented because the election of statewide officeholders is independent of the election of the governor
Line item veto
an executive's ability to block a particular provision in a bill passed by the legislature -only governors have power (Constitutional amendment would give president the power) -Clinton used it
Kitchen Cabinet
an informal group of advisers to whom the president turns for counsel and guidance; members of the official Cabinet may or may not also be members of the Kitchen Cabinet
Brownlow Commission
committee that in 1937 recommended sweeping changes to the executive branch of the United States government. -growth in federal bureaucracy = larger executive
Electoral College (why?)
compromise of founding fathers for electing the president -argued between Congress or people choosing the president -Congress = corruption, people = not filly informed/dangerously powerful president
8 presidents -JFK, Lincoln, McKinley, Garfield = assassination -Taylor, Harrison, FDR, Harding = natural causes
death in office
-president's lack knowledge of what is happening -skewed opinion of chief of staff -information cut-off (President can misdirect solution) -less perspectives
disadvantages of pyramidal structure
Organization of the White House
how president chooses to organize staff -reflects personality based on family / type of organization
Presidential Succession Act of 1947
law specifying the order of presidential succession following the Vice President -Act of Congress
president will not regain powers
long term Disability in presidency
-president -vice president -secretary of state -Secretary of defense -Secretary of Homeland Security -Director of the CIA -Joint Chiefs (state)
members of the national security council
Balancing the ticket (VP)
occurs when a presidential nominee chooses a vice presidential running mate who has different qualities in order to attract more votes.
EOP
performs services for the president
Impoundment Act
president must inform congress of intention not to spend or delay of spending money -45 days President can use media to advantage (bully pit) and pressure Congress
duties of national security council
previews legislation to advise on the impact to national security
12th Amendment (1804)
separation of votes for President and Vice President
temporary power transfer
short term Disability in presidency
Circular White House Office Structure
staff and advisors report directly to the Oval Office -president in center of wheel -open door
VP to president -new president chooses VP which must be approved by Congress
succession
propinquity
the more we see and interact with people, the more likely they are to become our friends and have influence
pyramidal white house staff
tiered/hierarchy system -things at bottom of pyramid can be reported up to "chain of command" for help or to deal with issue -as many layers/levels as a president likes -goes up to chief of staff which then goes to president
Andrew Jackson
war hero -shows that if you were a popular president, you can expand powers -"Trail of Tears"
Lincoln
was the only one during the Congress Reemergence era that expanded Presidential power -did not receive popular vote