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US Politics. The Presidency. Overview. Powers of the President Organization of the Presidency Electing the President Removal and Succession. Powers of the President. Formal Powers. Appointment. Treaties and Foreign Policy. Veto/Sign Legislation. Powers of the President.
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US Politics The Presidency
Overview • Powers of the President • Organization of the Presidency • Electing the President • Removal and Succession
Powers of the President Formal Powers Appointment Treaties and Foreign Policy Veto/Sign Legislation
Powers of the President • Special Executive Powers • Executive Orders • A rule or regulation issued by the president that has the effect of law. • They can • enforce legislative statutes • enforce the Constitution or treaties • establish or modify rules and practices of executive administrative agencies • Published in The Federal Register
Powers of the President • Executive Privilege • The right of executive officials to withhold information from or to refuse to appear before a legislative committee • Emergency Powers • An inherent power exercised by the president during a period of national crisis
Powers of the President • Informal Powers • Persuasion • Personal communication skills • Partisan divide in Congress • Place in term • Public Opinion ratings
Powers of the President Source: Wall Street Journal
Electing the President • Longest campaign election of any elected office in US, probably the world • Unique electoral system in US • Three stages
Primary Season • To win presidency, candidates generally need to secure nomination of major party • Since the 1972 presidential election, both parties have relied on party primary elections to solve this
Primary Season • Primary Elections run from late January through June in the year preceding the general election (2008 calendar here) • Elections come in 2 types: • closed (must be party member to vote) • open (open to all registered voters) (state by state summaries available here)
Primary Season • The aim in these elections is to win delegates to the party conventions • Each party allocates a set number of delegates to each state, based on the number of registered party members of that party in the state
Primary Season • In addition, the Democratic party has 796 “superdelegates” who are party leaders and who are not pledged to vote for any particular candidate prior to the convention (NJ has 18 of these) • The Republicans have 123 unpledged party leaders who are at the convention with voting rights
Primary Season • The two major parties use different systems for allocating delegates though • Republicans generally use “winner-take-all” format • the candidate that wins the primary gets all that state’s delegates [2008 totals for Republican primaries here] • Democrats use “proportional” rep • candidates are allocated delegates based on the percentage of the vote received [2008 totals for Democratic primaries here]
Nominating Convention • Held late summer (usually the last two weeks of August through early September) • Nominate president, vice-president, and adopt party platform Democratic Convention (8/25-28)Republican Convention (9/1-4)
General Election Campaign • Generally runs from end of convention through the election • Election is held the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November
General Election • To be elected president, candidate must receive a majority of votes cast in the Electoral College
General Election • Formula for allocating seats is: # of Reps + # of Sen = E.C.V 435 + 100 = 535 D.C. gets 3 (23rd Amendment) so 538/2 = 269+1 = 270 votes needed to be president
General Election • Aim is to win enough states so that the electoral college vote is over 270 • This means it is possible for a candidate to win more popular votes and still lose the election (1824, 1876, 1888, 2000)
Electoral College • Members of the Electoral College vote in each state (they do not collectively assemble) • Cast ballots on the 1st Monday after the 2nd Wednesday in December.
Electoral College • If no candidate received 270 votes, then: • House of Representatives elects president • take top 3 vote getters • each states gets 1 vote • Senate elects vice president • take top 2 vote getters • each senator gets 1 vote
Vice Presidency • Same requirements as president, except cannot be from same state as the president (12th Amendment) • President of the Senate • Other responsibilities as designated by the President
Removal and Succession • Removal: • Election • Impeachment • Resignation • Death • Illness
Removal • Illness: 25th Amendment • President informs Congress • If President unable to inform Congress, then VP does it, with majority vote of cabinet • If dispute over whether President is able to return to office, 2/3rds vote of Congress decides whether VP stays or not
Succession • Succession Act of 1947 • Pres • VP • Speaker of the House • President pro tempore of Senate • Cabinet Secretaries chronologically arranged by creation of department