Presidential Roles and Powers Formal Powers of the President
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Transcript Presidential Roles and Powers Formal Powers of the President
Presidential Roles and
Powers
Formal Powers of the
President
Constitutional or expressed powers of
the presidency
Found primarily in Article II of the
Constitution (the Executive Article)
Head
of
State
The President is chief of state. This means
he is the ceremonial head of the government
of the United States, the symbol of all the
people of the nation.
Queen Elizabeth and President Reagan, 1983
President Kennedy speaks at Berlin Wall,
1963
Chief
Executive
The Constitution vests the President with the
executive power of the United States, making him
or her the nation’s chief executive.
President Clinton with Janet Reno,
the first female Attorney General,
February, 1993
President Bush holds cabinet meeting
in October, 2005
Formal Powers:
Chief Executive
“Faithfully execute” the laws
Grant pardons for federal offenses except for
cases of impeachment
Nominate judges of the Supreme Court and
all other officers of the U.S. with consent of
the Senate
Fill vacancies that may happen during recess
of the Senate (recess appointments)
Commander-in-Chief
The Constitution makes the President the
commander in chief, giving him or her
complete control of the nation’s armed forces.
President Johnson decorates a soldier
in Vietnam, October, 1966
President Bush aboard U.S.S.
Lincoln, May, 2003
Formal Powers:
Commander-in-Chief
Commander in Chief of the Army & Navy
Making undeclared war
Limited by War Powers Act 1973
President must inform congress within 24
hours of troops being used for combat
President can commit troops for more 90
days without consent of congress
Chief
Legislator
The President is the chief legislator, the
main architect of the nation’s public
policies.
President Clinton delivers the State
of the Union Address, 1997
President Roosevelt signs into law the
Social Security Act, 1935
Formal Powers:
Chief Legislator
Give State of the Union address to
Congress
Recommend “measures” to the Congress
Upon “extraordinary occasions” convene
both houses of Congress
Formal Powers:
Chief Legislator (cont.)
Presidential Veto
Veto Message within 10 days of passing the House of
origin
Pocket Veto - President does not sign within 10 days
Congress can override with 2/3 majority from both
Houses
Veto Politics
Congressional override is difficult (only 4%)
Threat of veto can cause Congress to make changes in
legislation
Political Party Leader
The President acts as the chief of party, the
acknowledged leader of the political party
that controls the executive branch.
President Reagan & Vice-President Bush accepting their party’s
nomination in 1980
Chief
Administrator
The President is the chief administrator, or
director, of the United States government.
President Bush at Ground Zero after 9-11
Vice-President Johnson sworn in
aboard Air Force One
after President Kennedy’s
assassination, 1963
Chief Diplomat
As the nation’s chief diplomat, the President
is the main architect of American foreign
policy and chief spokesperson to the rest of
the world.
President Lincoln during the Civil
War, 1862
President Roosevelt and the “Bully
Pulpit,” 1910
Formal Powers:
Foreign Affairs
Appoint ambassadors, ministers and
consuls
Make treaties subject to Senate
confirmation
Receive ambassadors
Diplomatic Recognition – acknowledging
the legal existence of a country/state
Chief Citizen
The President is expected to be “the
representative of all the people.”
Informal Powers
Those powers not explicitly written in the
Constitution
Similar to “necessary and proper” powers of
Congress
In the modern era (since 1933), the President’s
informal powers may be significantly more powerful
than his formal powers
Executive
Orders
Orders issued by the
President that carry the force
of law
Clinton’s “Don’t ask don’t
tell” gays in the military
policy
FDR’s internment of
Japanese Americans
GWB trying suspected
terrorists in military tribunals
Notice for Japanese “relocation,” 1942
Executive Agreements
International agreements, usually related to trade, made
by a president that has the force of a treaty; does NOT
need Senate approval
Jefferson’s purchase of Louisiana in 1803
• GWB announced cuts in
the nuclear arsenal, but
not in a treaty; usually
trade agreements between
US and other nations
Executive Privilege
Claim by a president that he has the right to decide
that the national interest will be better served if
certain information is withheld from the public,
including the Courts and Congress
• United States v. Nixon
(1973) – presidents do
NOT have unqualified
executive privilege (Nixon
Watergate tapes)