Vice President
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Transcript Vice President
The Institutions
Unit IVB
The Presidency
The White House
Constitutional Qualifications
Be at least 35 years old
A natural-born citizen of the United States
Lived in the U.S. for 14 years
Twelfth Amendment requires Vice President to
fulfill qualifications
“Typical” Qualifications
Political experience
Vice presidents, state governors, U.S. senators, U.S. representatives
Presidents with no prior elected office:
Military service
12 Presidents with no prior military service:
Not involved in the “mess in Washington”
Only two female vice-presidential major party candidates
John F. Kennedy (D) was first Catholic president (1961-1963)
Barack Obama (D) was first black president (2009-Present)
Charismatic
Outsider
John Adams (F), John Quincy Adams (D-R, NR), Martin van Buren (D), Grover Cleveland (D),
William Howard Taft (R), Woodrow Wilson (D), Warren Harding (R), Calvin Coolidge (R), Herbert
Hoover (R), Franklin Roosevelt (D), Bill Clinton (D), Barack Obama (D)
White Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP)
Zachary Taylor (W), Ulysses S. Grant (R), William H. Taft (R), Herbert Hoover (R), Dwight
Eisenhower (R)
Geraldine Ferraro (D) (1984), Sarah Palin (R) (2008)
James Buchanan (R) was only president not married (1857-1861)
Electoral College
Article II establishes Electoral College
12th Amendment requires vote for president AND vice president
Each state receives number of electors equal to number of
representatives and senators
23rd Amendment provides 3 electoral votes for District of Columbia
Usually, state political parties nominate their electors
Winner-take-all for 48 states based on popular vote in state
In response to Election of 1800; Jefferson and Burr
Maine and Nebraska split electoral votes
Electoral majority required
Currently, 270 out of 538
House of Representatives chooses if no majority
20th Amendment requires newly elected incoming House to choose
Presidential Candidates and State Campaigns
Number of Hand Waves depicts number
of presidential and vice-presidential
candidate visits in last five weeks of
election of 2004
Number of Dollar Signs depicts number
of presidential campaign spending in last
five weeks of election of 2004
Electoral College?
Polls increasing against
Electoral College as
antiquated or undemocratic
May win national popular vote,
but no electoral majority
Candidates ignore several states
in favor of large states and
swing states
Propose choose electors
based on winner of each
congressional district OR
national popular vote only
Election of 1824
Election of 1876
Samuel Tilden (D) won over 50% of
popular vote
3 contested states awarded to
Rutherford B. Hayes (R)
Election of 1888
Andrew Jackson earned popular vote
and plurality of electoral votes
House of Rep elected John Q. Adams
Grover Cleveland (D) won popular
vote, but lost to Benjamin Harrison (R)
in electoral votes
Election of 2000
Al Gore (D) won popular vote, but lost
to George W. Bush (R)
U.S. Supreme Court decided on recount
of Florida’s votes
Inauguration
“I do solemnly swear (or affirm)
that I will faithfully execute the
Office of President of the United
States, and will to the best of my
Ability, preserve, protect and
defend the Constitution of the
United States.” – Oath of Office
Twentieth Amendment (1933)
established January 20th as
inauguration date
Used to be on March 4th
Since John Adams, the Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court has
administered the oath
Presidential Terms of Office
Four-year terms
Originally, no limit to number of terms served
George Washington set precedent/tradition of
two terms
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Elected to 4 terms (1932, 1936, 1940, 1944)
22nd Amendment (1951)
Limited president to two terms
Presidential Benefits
$400,000 annual salary
$50,000 annual tax-free expense account
$100,000 annual tax-free travel allowance
Taxable pension plan
Secret Service protection
Support staff
White House staff of 400-500 people
Camp David, a countryside getaway
Air Force One (plane) and Marine One (helicopter)
Considered the most powerful person in the world
Leader of the Free World
Executive Privilege
Power to refuse appearing before or refusing to provide
information to Congress or the Supreme Court
Presidents argue for it based on separation of powers
United States v. Nixon (1974)
Washington refused to provide House of Representatives
conditions of treaty
Evidence may not be withheld in criminal proceedings
Clinton v. Jones (1997)
Presidency cannot protect from civil litigation on actions
before becoming president
Formal Executive Powers of the President
“…take care that the laws be faithfully executed”
EXECUTIVE ORDERS
Rules and regulations of enforcement by president
Suspension of habeas corpus, Japanese internment, equality in armed
forces, EPA
Ex parte Milligan
Korematsu v. United States
Presidential Appointments
Appoints…
from office
* - The president cannot remove
Executive department heads (i.e. Secretary of State)
Heads of independent regulatory agencies (i.e. Federal Reserve Chairperson)*
Federal judiciary (including U.S. Supreme Court)*
U.S. marshals and attorneys
Formal Legislative Powers of the President
Veto Power
Sign bills into law
Veto bills
Congressional override (2/3 majority of both houses)
POCKET VETO
LINE-ITEM VETO
Clinton v. City of New York
State of the Union Address
Special Sessions of Congress
Prepare and propose federal budget to Congress
Per the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921
Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act (1974)
Less than 10% of vetoes ever overridden
Denied president right to refuse spending appropriated funds
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Agenda Setting and Power of Persuasion
National leader
Head of the party
Bully pulpit
Presidential approval ratings
Veto threat
Formal Judicial Powers of the
President
Appoint justices to the U.S. Supreme Court and
lower federal courts
Requires Senate approval (simple majority)
Senatorial courtesy
Grants reprieves, pardons, amnesty
Reprieves postpone a sentence allowing for appeals
Pardons forgive a crime and cancel the punishment
Amnesty is to forget the crime in lieu of testimony
or support
Gerald Ford’s blanket pardon of Nixon for
Formal Diplomatic Powers of the President
Congress delegates diplomatic powers to President
Appoints ambassadors
U.S. Senate approval (simple majority)
Receives foreign dignitaries
Recognize nations
Negotiates treaties
Requires advice and consent of Senate (2/3) majority
EXECUTIVE AGREEMENTS
Bypassing treaty ratification requirements, president establishes
foreign policy with heads of states
Does not require Senate approval, but must be re-consented by each
new president
Formal Military Powers of the President
Commander-in-Chief
Provides for domestic order
Over all armed forces
Appoints Joint Chiefs of Staff
(military advisors)
Wages war
Call up the National Guard in
affected state/locality
War Powers Resolution (1973)
President notifies Congress 48 hours
in advance of combat
Armed forces for 60 days and 30-day
withdrawal period
Congress may extend military use,
declare war, or authorize use of
military
Informal Powers of the President
Recognized as leader of his/her political party
Chooses running mate
Coattail effect
Patronage
Agenda setting and influence on party platforms
and party legislative actions
The Many Hats of the President
Chief Executive
Chief Legislator
Ceremonies, receive foreign leaders, official dinners
Chief Diplomat
In charge of armed forces
Head of State
Propose legislation, veto power, State of the Union
Commander-in-Chief
Execute laws, appoint executive officials
Negotiate treaties/alliances, develop foreign policies, appoint
ambassadors
Head of Political Party
Agenda setting, coattails, patronage
Impeachment
May be charged with treason, bribery, high crimes and misdemeanors
House of Representatives impeaches (indicts/charges/accuses)
Senate tries (acquit or convict)
Simple majority required
Presided over by Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
2/3 majority required for conviction
Historical Events
Andrew Johnson
Bill Clinton
Democrat president dealing with Radical Republicans during Reconstruction
Acquitted by 1 vote on 2 charges
Democrat president involved in affair and impeached by Republican-dominated House
for perjury and obstruction of justice
Overwhelmingly acquitted
Richard Nixon*
House Judiciary Committee was in process of drafting impeachment articles before
Nixon resigned
Vice President
Selection of a Vice President
Balance the ticket
Selected based on different party faction, geographical region, political
experience
Constitutional Responsibilities
John F. Kennedy/Lyndon B. Johnson (1960 Election)
Preside over the Senate as President of the Senate
Break voting ties in the Senate
Assume presidency upon death, infirmity, disability, removal from office
of president
Duties of a Vice President
Attend Cabinet meetings alongside the president
Serve on National Security Council
Diplomatic representative of president
Presidential Succession
Vice president succeeds president
upon death, removal from office,
disability, infirmity
Article II
Twentieth Amendment
Twenty-Fifth Amendment
Presidential Succession Act of 1947
Vice President
Speaker of the House
President Pro Tempore
Secretary of State
Secretary of Treasury
Secretary of Defense
Attorney General
Presidential Succession (cont.)
Based on chronological order of
executive department
Secretary of Interior
Secretary of Agriculture
Secretary of Commerce
Secretary of Labor
Secretary of Health and Human
Services
Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development
Secretary of Transportation
Secretary of Energy
Secretary of Education
Secretary of Veterans’ Affairs
Secretary of Homeland Security
The Office of the President
In development of policy and decision-making,
the closest and/or last person/people to the
president influence the ultimate decision
Executive Office of the President
White House Staff
Executive Order 8248 by FDR
Part of the EOP
The Cabinet
Executive department heads
White House Staff
May be hired and fired at will; no legislative or judicial approval necessary
Chief of Staff
Press Secretary
Disseminate and provide information to the president, the White House staff, and the mass
media
Communications
Administers the White House staff
Usually a personal or close friend/ally
May possess a certain policy expertise or political connections
Develop and promote the president’s agenda
Organizational Structures
Pyramid
Circular
Hierarchal structure reports to the Chief of Staff
Members and aides all directly report to the president
Ad-hoc
Task forces, committees, informal groups of advisors and friends report to the president
Executive Office of the President
Policy advisors and experts
Some officials require Senate approval
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Assist in developing federal budget proposal
Monitor supervision of executive agencies
Council of Economic Advisers
National Security Council
National security and foreign policy advisement
Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
The Cabinet
Administrators, or secretaries, of the executive departments
Appointed by president and approval from Senate
Selection by President
Usually an expert in department appointed with some political and
private experience
In most cases, the person barely has any personal or political
relationship to the president, if any
Some may be chosen for image of diversity
Department Loyalty
Policy expertise over partisanship, administration
Some in-fighting with EOP and White House Staff
The Executive Departments
Dept. of State
FBI
Dept. of Interior
Prints currency; collects
revenue/taxes; IRS
Dept. of Defense
Dept. of Justice
Dept. of Treasury
Foreign affairs
Federal land and natural resources;
native relations and territory
administration
Dept. of Agriculture
Dept. of Commerce
Dept. of Labor
Dept. of Health and Human
Services
Dept. of Housing and
Urban Development
Dept. of Transportation
Dept. of Energy
Dept. of Education
Dept. of Veterans’ Affairs
Dept. of Homeland Security
Coast Guard, ICE, Secret
Service
The First Lady
First and foremost as White
House hostess
Attends social events and
ceremonies with or representing
president
Modern First Ladies usually
coordinate politically safe valence
issues and initiatives
Nancy Reagan’s “Just Say No To
Drugs”
Strong First Ladies
Dolly Madison
Eleanor Roosevelt
Civil rights issues, campaigned for
FDR
Hillary Clinton
Given direct policy role for national
health care initiative
Presidential Character
Active-Positive
Energetic, high selfesteem, confident,
optimistic, productive,
flexible, enjoys being
president
Jefferson, FDR, Truman,
Kennedy, H.W. Bush
Presidential Character
Active-Negative
Energetic, low selfesteem, compulsive,
rigid, secures and retains
power, pessimism
Wilson, Hoover, Lyndon
Johnson, Nixon
Presidential Character
Passive-Positive
Enjoys being president,
seeks affection,
cooperative,
compromising, limited
energy, reacts
Madison, Taft, Harding,
Reagan, Clinton
Presidential Character
Passive-Negative
Obligated, limited
energy, principles over
politics, avoids power
Washington, Coolidge,
Eisenhower