the presidency
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The Presidency. President and Vice President. Presidential Qualifications. Constitutional Article II Section 1 Natural born citizen of the United States At least 35 years old Resident of the United States for at least 14 years before taking office - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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The Presidency
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President and Vice President
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Presidential Qualifications
• Constitutional– Article II Section 1
• Natural born citizen of the United States• At least 35 years old• Resident of the United States for at least 14 years
before taking office• Same requirements apply to the vice president
– 22nd Amendment• Term Limit
– Impeachment
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Informal Presidential Qualifications• Government Experience
– Some Exceptions• Military
– Political Connections Gained– Lately Governor has been
stepping stone• Carter, Reagan, Clinton, Bush
• Money– Costs
• Long campaign• TV and other advertising• Campaign staff and consultants
– Sources• Personal wealth• Fundraising
– PACs and lobbyists• Government matching funds
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Informal Presidential Qualifications
• Political Beliefs– Moderate or mainstream
candidates usually win– Extremists rarely win
• Personal Characteristics– Northern European
Background– Middle Class Background– White, Married, Protestant,
Financially Successful Men– Exceptions?
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Presidential Succession
• Article II Section 1– Vice President– Congress appoints successor if both offices are
vacant• Presidential Succession Act of 1947• Twenty-Fifth Amendment
– Presidential Disability– Replacement of VP
• The Vice President’s Role
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What is the presidential line of succession?
Back
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Powers of the President• Commander in Chief
– Expansion of Power in the 20th Century
• Appointments– Executive Departments, Judges,
Ambassadors, and Other Top Officials
– Advice and Consent of the Senate• Make Treaties
– Advice and Consent of the Senate• Take Care That the Laws Be
Faithfully Executed• Run the Executive Branch• Manage the Economy
– 20th Century
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Expansion of Presidential Powers
• Establishing presidential authority– George Washington sets precedent: primacy of
national government, Cabinet, foreign policy, neutrality, inherent powers
– John Adams and Thomas Jefferson follow suit• Incremental expansion of presidential powers: 1809-1933
– Andrew Jackson: the veto– Abraham Lincoln: habeas corpus, overriding
congressional mandates, unconstitutional blockades, U.S. mail
– Progressives• Growth of modern presidency
– Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal
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Presidential Powers
• Constitutional Powers– Article II
• The Executive Power shall be vested in a President
– Vague– Potential source of great power
• Powers of the President • Executive Privilege?
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Presidential Powers
• Informal Sources of Power– Personal Exercise of Power
• Power to Persuade• Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, T. Roosevelt, Wilson, FDR
– Immediate Needs of the Nation• War, Depression, National Emergency
– Mandate• Election
– Honeymoon period• Popularity
– TV
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Presidential Powers• Limits on Power
– Congress• Override• Power of the Purse• Senate Confirmation Power• Impeachment
– Courts and the Constitution• Jefferson, Jackson, FDR, Nixon
– Bureaucracy– Public Opinion
• Media• LBJ
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Presidential Vetoes
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Presidential Vetoes
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• Vice president– Greater powers in recent history
• Cabinet– Article II, section 3– Size
• First Lady– Influence on policy– Informal social/philanthropic
endeavors• Executive Office of the President• White House staff
The Presidential Establishment
To Learning Objectives
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• Presidential leadership– Washington, Jefferson,
Lincoln, Roosevelt– Richard E. Neustadt– James David Barber
• Going public– The bully pulpit– Press conferences– Television appearances
• The public’s perception of performance– Approval ratings
Presidential Leadership and the Importance of Public Opinion
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Back
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U.S. Presidents
Continue
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U.S. Presidents
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Who were the best and worst U.S. presidents?
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What can we learn from presidential personalities?
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President’s Term and Salary
• Term– Washington Precedent
• Two Terms– FDR
• Four Terms– Twenty-Second Amendment
• Two Terms• Ten Year Limit
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President’s Term and Salary• Salary and Benefits
– $400,000 a year• Since 2001
– Up to $100,000 in nontaxable travel expenses a year– Congress may not increase or decrease salary during a
president’s term– Transportation
• Air Force One, Marine One, other planes helicopters, and limousines
– Free Health Care – White House and Staff– Pension
• $148,000 a year• Free office space and mailing
– $96,000 a year for office help
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Electing the President• Electoral College
– Compromise between Direct Popular Vote and Congress Choosing the President
– Involved the States• Electors originally chosen by state legislatures• Number of Representatives + 2 Senators = Number of
Electors– Originally Electors cast two votes each, and whoever
came in second became the Vice President– If there is a tie or no one receives a majority of the
electoral votes• It was expected that this would be the way most elections
would be decided
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Electing the President
• Washington Unchallenged
• Development of Political Parties
• Election of 1800• Twelfth Amendment• By 1820s most states
used popular vote to determine electors
• Important Elections– Election of 1824– Election of 1860– Election of 1876– Election of 1888– Election of 1912– Election of 1932– Election of 1936– Elections 1960-2004
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Election Sites
• Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections
• President Elect• 270 To Win• Bob Alley’s Election 2004 Site• Bob Alley’s Election 2008 Site
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October 2004 Electoral Vote Predictor
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Presidential Leadership
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Watergate
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The President as Policy Maker
• President’s role in proposing and facilitating legislation– Franklin D. Roosevelt– Difficulties
• Budgetary process and legislative implementation– Office of Management and
Budget (OMB)• Policy making through
executive order– Limited effectiveness– Youngstown Sheet and Tube v.
Sawyer (1952)
To Learning Objectives