Acting officers may be eligible. In 2009, the Continuity of Government Commission, a private non-partisan think tank, reported,

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Acting officers may be eligible. In 2009, the Continuity of Government Commission, a private non-partisan think tank, reported,"

Transcription

1 Current order This is a list of the current presidential line of succession, [1] as specified by the United States Constitution and the Presidential Succession Act of 1947 [2] as subsequently amended to include newly created cabinet offices. Key Democrat = (D) Republican = (R) Independent = (I) # Office Current officer 1 Vice President of the United States Joe Biden (D) 2 Speaker of the House John Boehner (R) 3 President pro tempore of the Senate Patrick Leahy (D) 4 Secretary of State John Kerry (D) -- Acting Secretary of Treasury Neal Wolin (D) [3] 5 Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta (D) 6 Attorney General Eric Holder (D) 7 Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar (D) 8 Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack (D) -- Acting Secretary of Commerce Rebecca Blank (D) [3] -- Acting Secretary of Labor Seth Harris (D) [3] 9 Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius (D) 10 Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan (D) 11 Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood (R) 12 Secretary of Energy Steven Chu (D) 13 Secretary of Education Arne Duncan (D) 14 Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki (I) 15 Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano (D) [edit] Eligibility [edit] Eligibility requirements No person is eligible to be President unless that person is a "natural-born citizen", is at least thirty-five years old, and has been a resident within the United States for at least fourteen years. These eligibility requirements are specified both in the U.S. Constitution, Article II, Section 1, Clause 5, and in the Presidential Succession Act (3 U.S.C. 19(e)). [edit] Acting officers Acting officers may be eligible. In 2009, the Continuity of Government Commission, a private non-partisan think tank, reported, The language in the current Presidential Succession Act is less clear than that of the 1886 Act with respect to Senate confirmation. The 1886 Act refers to "such officers as shall have been appointed by the advice and consent of the Senate to the office therein named..." The current act merely refers to "officers appointed, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate." Read literally, this means that the current act allows for acting secretaries to be in the line of succession as long as they are confirmed by the Senate for a post (even for example, the second or third in command

2 within a department). It is not uncommon for a second in command to become acting secretary when the secretary leaves office. Though there is some dispute over this provision, the language clearly permits acting secretaries to be placed in the line of succession. (We have spoken to acting secretaries who told us they had been placed in the line of succession.) [4] [edit] Motivation for changes to the succession in 1945 Two months after succeeding Franklin D. Roosevelt, President Harry S. Truman proposed that the Speaker of the House and the President pro tempore of the Senate be granted priority in the line of succession over the Cabinet so as to ensure the President would not be able to appoint his successor to the Presidency. [5] The Secretary of State and the other Cabinet officials are appointed by the President, while the Speaker of the House and the President pro tempore of the Senate are elected officials. The Speaker is chosen by the U.S. House of Representatives, and every Speaker has been a member of that body for the duration of their term as Speaker; the President pro tempore is chosen by the U.S. Senate and by custom the Senator of the majority party with the longest record of continuous service fills this position. The Congress approved this change and inserted the Speaker and the President pro tempore in line, ahead of the members of the Cabinet in the order in which their positions were established. In his speech supporting the changes, Truman noted that the House is more likely to be in political agreement with the President and Vice President than the Senate. The succession of a Republican to a Democratic Presidency would further complicate an already unstable political situation. However, when the changes to the succession were signed into law, they placed Republican House Speaker Joseph W. Martin first in the line of succession after the Vice President. [6] Some of Truman's critics said that his ordering of the Speaker before the President pro tempore was motivated by his dislike of the then-current holder of the latter rank, Senator Kenneth McKellar. [7] Further motivation may have been provided by Truman's preference for House Speaker Sam Rayburn to be next in the line of succession, rather than Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius, Jr. [edit] Constitutional foundation The line of succession is mentioned in three places in the Constitution: in Article II, Section 1, in Section 3 of the 20th Amendment, and in the 25th Amendment. Article II, Section 1, Clause 6 makes the Vice President first in the line of succession and allows the Congress to provide by law for cases in which neither the President nor Vice President can serve. The current such law governing succession is the Presidential Succession Act of 1947 (3 U.S.C. 19). Section 3 of the 20th Amendment provides that if the President-elect dies before his term begins, the Vice President-elect becomes President on Inauguration Day and serves for the full term to which the Presidentelect was elected. The section also provides that if, on Inauguration Day, a president has not been chosen or the President-elect does not qualify for the presidency, the Vice President-elect acts as president until a president is chosen or the President-elect qualifies. Finally, Section 3 allows the Congress to provide by law for cases in which neither a President-elect nor a Vice President-elect is eligible or available to serve. The 25th Amendment, ratified in 1967, clarified Article II, Section 1: that the Vice President is the direct successor of the President. He or she becomes President if the President dies, resigns or is removed from office. The amendment also provides for the situation where the President is temporarily disabled, such as if the President has a surgical procedure or becomes mentally unstable. It also required vice presidential vacancies to be filled by the President and confirmed by Congress. Previously, when a vice president had succeeded to the presidency or otherwise left the office empty (through death, resignation, or removal from office), the vice presidency remained vacant until the next presidential election.

3 [edit] Acting President and President Main article: Acting President of the United States New President Lyndon Johnson was sworn in aboard Air Force One, following the assassination of John F. Kennedy in Article II, Section 1 of the United States Constitution provides that: In case of the removal of the President from office, or of his death, resignation, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President... until the disability be removed, or a President elected. This originally left open the question whether "the same" refers to "the said office" or only "the powers and duties of the said office". Some historians, including Edward Corwin [8] and John D. Feerick, [8] have argued that the framers' intention was that the Vice President would remain Vice President while executing the powers and duties of the presidency; however, there is also much evidence to the contrary, the most compelling of which is Article I, section 3, of the Constitution itself, the relevant text of which reads: The Vice President of the United States shall be President of the Senate, but shall have no vote, unless they be equally divided. The Senate shall choose their other officers, and also a President pro tempore, in the absence of the Vice President, or when he shall exercise the office of President of the United States. This text appears to answer the hypothetical question of whether the office or merely the powers of the presidency devolved upon the Vice President on his succession. Thus, the 25th Amendment merely restates and reaffirms the validity of existing precedent, apart from adding valuable new protocols for presidential disability. Not everyone agreed with this interpretation when it was first put to the test, and it was left to John Tyler, the first presidential successor in U.S. history, to establish the precedent that was respected in the absence of the 25th Amendment.

4 In 1841, John Tyler became the first person to succeed to the presidency. Upon the death of President William Henry Harrison in 1841, after a brief hesitation, Vice President John Tyler took the position that he was President, and not merely acting President, upon taking the presidential oath of office. However, some contemporaries including John Quincy Adams, [8][9] Henry Clay [10] and other members of Congress, [9][10] Whig party leaders, [10] and even Tyler's own cabinet [9][10] believed that he was only acting as president, and did not have the office itself. Nonetheless, Tyler adhered to his position, even returning unopened mail addressed to the "Acting President of the United States" sent by his detractors. [11] Tyler's view ultimately prevailed when the Senate voted to accept the title "President," [10] and this precedent was followed thereafter. The question was finally resolved by Section 1 of the 25th Amendment which specifies that: "In case of the removal of the President from office or of his death or resignation, the Vice President shall become President." The Amendment does not specify whether officers other than the Vice President can become President rather than Acting President in the same set of circumstances. However, the Presidential Succession Act makes clear that anyone who takes office under its provisions shall only "act as President" even if they "act" in that role for years. Thus only someone serving as Vice President can ever succeed to the title of "President of the United States." [edit] History of succession law set by Congress Main article: Presidential Succession Act Wikisource has original text related to this article: Presidential Succession Act 1792 The Presidential Succession Act of 1792 was the first succession law passed by Congress. The act was contentious because of conflict between the Federalists and Democratic-Republicans. The Federalists did not want the Secretary of State to appear next on the list after the Vice President because Thomas Jefferson was then Secretary of State and had emerged as a Democratic-Republican leader. There were also concerns about including the Chief Justice of the United States since that would go against the separation of powers. The compromise that was worked out established the President pro tempore of the Senate as next in line of succession after the Vice President, followed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives. In either case, these officers were to "act as President of the United States until the disability be removed or a president be elected." The Act called for a special election to be held in November of the year in which dual vacancies occurred (unless the vacancies occurred after the first Wednesday in October, in which case the election would occur the following year; or unless the vacancies occurred within the last year of the presidential term, in which case the next election would take place as regularly scheduled). The people elected

5 President and Vice President in such a special election would have served a full four-year term beginning on March 4 of the next year, but no such election ever took place. Wikisource has original text related to this article: Presidential Succession Act 1886 In 1881, after the death of President Garfield, and in 1885, after the death of Vice President Hendricks, there had been no President pro tempore in office, and as the new House of Representatives had yet to convene, no Speaker either, [12] leaving no one at all in the line of succession after the vice president. When Congress convened in December 1885, President Cleveland asked for a revision of the 1792 act, which was passed in Congress replaced the President pro tempore and Speaker with officers of the President's Cabinet with the Secretary of State first in line. In the first 100 years of the United States, six former Secretaries of State had gone on to be elected President, while only two congressional leaders had advanced to that office. As a result, changing the order of the line of succession seemed [citation needed] reasonable. Wikisource has original text related to this article: Presidential Succession Act 1947 The Presidential Succession Act of 1947, signed into law by President Harry S. Truman, added the Speaker of the House and President pro tempore back in the line, but switched the two from the 1792 order. It remains the sequence used today. Since the reorganization of the military in 1947 had merged the War Department (which governed the Army) with the Department of the Navy into the Department of Defense, the Secretary of Defense took the place in the order of succession previously held by the Secretary of War. The office of Secretary of the Navy, which had existed as a Cabinet-level position since 1798, had become subordinate to the Secretary of Defense in the military reorganization, and so was dropped from the line of succession in the 1947 Succession Act. Until 1971, the Postmaster General, the head of the Post Office Department, was a member of the Cabinet, initially the last in the presidential line of succession before new officers were added. Once the Post Office Department was re-organized into the United States Postal Service, a special agency independent of the executive branch, the Postmaster General ceased to be a member of the Cabinet and was thus removed from the line of succession. The order of Cabinet members set out in the statute has always been the same as the order in which their respective departments were established. However, when the United States Department of Homeland Security was created in 2002, many in Congress wanted the Secretary to be placed at number eight on the list below the Attorney General, above the Secretary of the Interior, and in the position held by the Secretary of the Navy prior to the creation of the Secretary of Defense because the Secretary, already in charge of disaster relief and security, would presumably be more prepared to take over the presidency than some of the other Cabinet secretaries. Legislation to add the Secretary of Homeland Security to the bottom of the list was enacted on March 9, [edit] Successions beyond Vice President

6 David Rice Atchison's tombstone, Plattsburg, Missouri, including the claim "President of the United States for One Day" While nine vice presidents have succeeded to the office upon the death or resignation of the President, and two vice presidents have temporarily served as acting President, no other officer has ever been called upon to act as President. On March 4, 1849, James K. Polk's presidency ended on a Sunday. President-elect Zachary Taylor declined to be sworn in on a Sunday, citing religious beliefs. Senate President pro tempore David Rice Atchison's tombstone states that he was President for the day. However, given that the last day of Atchison's own term as Senate President pro tempore was March 4 at noon, that claim seems dubious. Indeed, since Atchison took no oath of office to the presidency, it is not logical to label Atchison as a president on the basis of Taylor's merely not taking the oath. In 1865, when Andrew Johnson assumed the presidency on the death of Abraham Lincoln, the office of Vice President became vacant. At that time, the Senate President pro tempore was next in line to the presidency. In 1868 Johnson was impeached, and if he had been removed from office, President pro tempore Benjamin Wade would have become acting President. This posed a conflict of interest, as Wade's own vote on removal could have helped to determine whether he would succeed to the presidency. New President Gerald Ford is sworn in following the resignation of Richard Nixon During the 1973 vice-presidential vacancy, House Speaker Carl Albert was first in line. As the Watergate scandal made President Nixon's removal or resignation possible, Albert would have become Acting President and under Title 3, Section 19(c) of the U.S. Code would have been able to "act as President until the expiration of the then current Presidential term." Albert openly questioned whether it was appropriate for him, a Democrat, to assume the powers and duties of the presidency when there was a public mandate for the presidency to be held by a Republican. Albert announced that should he need to assume the presidential powers and duties, he would do so only as a caretaker. However, with the nomination and confirmation of Gerald Ford to the vice presidency, these series of events were never tested. Albert again became first-in-line during the first four months of Ford's presidency, before the confirmation of Vice President Nelson Rockefeller. In 1981, when President Ronald Reagan was shot, Vice President George H. W. Bush was traveling in Texas. Secretary of State Alexander Haig responded to a reporter's question regarding who was running the government by stating; Constitutionally, gentlemen, you have the President, the Vice President and the Secretary of State in that order, and should the President decide he wants to transfer the helm to the Vice President, he will do so. He has not done that. As of now, I am in control here, in the White House, pending return of the Vice President and in close touch with him. If something came up, I would check with him, of course. [13] A bitter dispute ensued over the meaning of Haig's remarks. Most people believed that Haig was referring to the line of succession and erroneously claimed to have temporary presidential authority, due to his implied reference to the Constitution. Haig and his supporters, noting his familiarity with the line of succession from his time as White House

7 Chief of Staff during Richard Nixon's resignation, said he only meant that he was the highest-ranking officer of the Executive branch on-site, managing things temporarily until the Vice President returned to Washington. [edit] Constitutional concerns Several constitutional law experts have raised questions as to the constitutionality of the provisions that the Speaker of the House and the President pro tempore of the Senate succeed to the presidency. [14] James Madison, one of the authors of the Constitution, raised similar constitutional questions about the Presidential Succession Act of 1792 in a 1792 letter to Edmund Pendleton. [15] Two of these issues can be summarized: The term "Officer" in the relevant clause of the Constitution is most plausibly interpreted to mean an "Officer of the United States", who must be a member of the Executive or Judicial Branch. The Speaker and the President pro tempore are not officers in this sense. Under the principle of separation of powers, the Constitution specifically disallows legislative officials from also serving in the executive branch. For the Speaker or the Senate President pro tempore to become Acting President, they must resign their position, at which point they are no longer in the line of succession. This forms a constitutional paradox to some. In 2003 the Continuity of Government Commission suggested that the current law has "at least seven significant issues... that warrant attention", including: [16] 1. The reality that all figures in the current line of succession work and reside in the vicinity of Washington, D.C. In the event of a nuclear, chemical, or biological attack, it is possible that everyone on the list would be killed or incapacitated. 2. Doubt (such as those expressed above by James Madison) that congressional leaders are eligible to act as President. 3. A concern about the wisdom of including the President pro tempore in the line of succession as the "largely honorific post traditionally held by the longest-serving Senator of the majority party". For example, from January 20, 2001, to June 6, 2001, the President pro tempore was then-98-year-old Strom Thurmond of South Carolina. 4. A concern that the current line of succession can force the presidency to abruptly switch parties mid-term, as the Speaker and the President pro tempore are not necessarily of the same party as the President. 5. A concern that the succession line is ordered by the dates of creation of the various executive departments, without regard to the skills or capacities of the persons serving as their Secretary. 6. The fact that, should a Cabinet member begin to act as President, the law allows the House to elect a new Speaker (or the Senate, a new President pro tempore), who could in effect remove the Cabinet member and assume the office themselves at any time. 7. The absence of a provision where a President is disabled and the vice presidency is vacant (for example, if an assassination attempt simultaneously wounded the President and killed the Vice President). [edit] See also Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution Designated survivor Fiction regarding United States presidential succession List of United States presidential assassination attempts and plots [edit] References 1. ^ "Presidential Succession: Perspectives, Contemporary Analysis, and 110th Congress Proposed Legislation (RL34692)" (pdf). Congressional Research Service. October 3, p ^ 3 U.S.C. 19

8 3. ^ a b c See "acting officers" section below for information about the eligibility of acting officers. 4. ^ "Preserving Our Institutions: Presidential Succession," Continuity of Government Commission, June 2009, p ^ "Special Message to the Congress on the Succession to the Presidency. June 19, 1945" by President Harry S. Truman; from the American Presidency Project archives 6. ^ Wildavsky, Aaron B. (2003). Horowitz, Irving. ed (in Rnglish) (Google Books). The revolt against the masses and other essays on politics and public policy. Transaction Publishers. p ISBN Retrieved July 24, ^ Kipnotes.com 8. ^ a b c Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr. (Autumn, 1974). "On the Presidential Succession". Political Science Quarterly 3 (3): 475, JSTOR ^ a b c Rankin, Robert S. (Feb. 1946). "Presidential Succession in the United States". The Journal of Politics 8 (1): doi: / JSTOR ^ a b c d e Abbott, Philip (Dec. 2005). "Accidental Presidents: Death, Assassination, Resignation, and Democratic Succession". Presidential Studies Quarterly 35 (4): 627, 638. doi: /j x. JSTOR ^ Crapol, Edward P. (2006). John Tyler: the accidental president. UNC Press Books. p. 10. ISBN OCLC ^ Lewis, Charlton Thomas; Willsey, Joseph H. (1895). Harper's Book of Facts: a Classified History of the World; Embracing Science, Literature, and Art. New York: Harper & Brothers. p LCCN succession%201885&pg=pa884#v=snippet&q=country%20without%20any%20one%20in%20the%20line%20of%20succession&f =false. Retrieved Apr 24, ^ Alexander Haig, Time Magazine, April 02, ^ "Is the Presidential Succession Law Constitutional?", Akhil Reed Amar, Stanford Law Review, November ^ uchicago.edu 16. ^ First Report p. 4, continuityofgovernment.org Retrieved December 28, 2010 via Internet Archive to repair dead link [edit] Further reading Ask Gleaves: Presidential Succession from the website of Grand Valley State University 3 U.S.C. 19 "Vacancy in offices of both President and Vice President; officers eligible to act" Presidential Succession Act of 1792, 1 Stat. 239 (from the American Memory website of the Library of Congress "Presidential Line of Succession Examined", a September 20, 2003 article from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel "WI Presidential Succession Act of 1947 held unconstitutional", David Tenner, Usenet group: soc.history.what-if, January 14, Fools, Drunkards, & Presidential Succession from the Federalist Society website Official website of the Continuity of Government Commission o October 2003 Hearings before the Continuity of Government Commission Testimony of M. Miller Baker from the U.S. Senate website

Report for Congress. Presidential and Vice Presidential Succession: Overview and Current Legislation. Updated March 25, 2003

Report for Congress. Presidential and Vice Presidential Succession: Overview and Current Legislation. Updated March 25, 2003 Order Code RL31761 Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Presidential and Vice Presidential Succession: Overview and Current Legislation Updated March 25, 2003 Thomas H. Neale Government and

More information

What Is a Bureaucracy?

What Is a Bureaucracy? What Is a Bureaucracy? Three features distinguish bureaucracies: Boss Hierarchical authority: Bureaucracies are based on a Workers pyramid structure with a chain of command running (Bureaucrats) from top

More information

Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 2

Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 2 Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 2 1 Objectives 1. Explain how the Constitution provides for presidential succession. 2. Understand the constitutional provisions relating to presidential disability.

More information

Chapter 8 The Presidency. Section 1 President and Vice President

Chapter 8 The Presidency. Section 1 President and Vice President The Presidency Chapter 8 The Presidency Section 1 President and Vice President Standard SSCG13: The student will describe the qualifications for becoming President of the United States Duties of the President

More information

CRS Report for Congress

CRS Report for Congress Order Code RL31761 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Presidential and Vice Presidential Succession: Overview and Current Legislation Updated August 26, 2004 Thomas H. Neale Government

More information

Qualifications. Article II of the Constitution -3 Requirements -At least 35 years old -Born in the U.S. -Live in the U.S.

Qualifications. Article II of the Constitution -3 Requirements -At least 35 years old -Born in the U.S. -Live in the U.S. The Executive Branch Powers listed in Article II Main duty: Enforce Laws Includes: The President Vice-President President s s Cabinet Qualifications To be the President or Vice President: At least 35 years

More information

Presidential term: Lived: Occupations: Planter, Lawyer. Vice Presidents: Aaron Burr, George Clinton

Presidential term: Lived: Occupations: Planter, Lawyer. Vice Presidents: Aaron Burr, George Clinton In this resource you will find portraits of the individuals who served as presidents of the United States, along with their occupations, political party affiliations, and other interesting facts. **The

More information

CRS Report for Congress

CRS Report for Congress Order Code RS20021 Updated March 7, 2006 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web The President s State of the Union Message: Frequently Asked Questions Summary Michael Kolakowski Information

More information

Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 2

Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 2 Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 2 Objectives 1. Explain how the Constitution provides for presidential succession. 2. Understand the constitutional provisions relating to presidential disability. 3.

More information

Contemporary United States

Contemporary United States Contemporary United States (1968 to the Present) PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES By Douglas Lynne PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES Published by Weigl Publishers Inc. 350 5th Avenue, Suite 3304 PMB 6G New

More information

Expansion and Reform. (Early 1800s-1861) PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. By Daniel Casciato

Expansion and Reform. (Early 1800s-1861) PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. By Daniel Casciato Expansion and Reform (Early 1800s-1861) PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES By Daniel Casciato PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES Published by Weigl Publishers Inc. 350 5th Avenue, Suite 3304 PMB 6G New York,

More information

Presidents of the United States Cards

Presidents of the United States Cards Presidents of the United States Cards Print on card stock and laminate for more durability if desired. Use as trading cards with friends as flashcards or a timeline to learn the Presidents. Created by

More information

SS7 CIVICS, CH. 8.1 THE GROWTH OF AMERICAN PARTIES FALL 2016 PP. PROJECT

SS7 CIVICS, CH. 8.1 THE GROWTH OF AMERICAN PARTIES FALL 2016 PP. PROJECT PROJECT SS7 CIVICS, CH. 8.1 THE GROWTH OF AMERICAN PARTIES DATE FALL 2016 CLIENT PP. 1. WHAT IS A POLITICAL PARTY? A POLITICAL PARTY IS AN ASSOCIATION OF VOTERS WITH COMMON INTERESTS WHO WANT TO INFLUENCE

More information

CHAPTER 13:2: The Vice President

CHAPTER 13:2: The Vice President CHAPTER 13:2: The Vice President Chapter 13:2 Objectives: o Students will examine the provisions of Presidential successions. o Students will examine how the Presidential disability is determined and dealt

More information

TRUE/FALSE. Write 'T' if the statement is true and 'F' if the statement is false on the blanks provided.

TRUE/FALSE. Write 'T' if the statement is true and 'F' if the statement is false on the blanks provided. Institutions of National Government: The Presidency & Bureaucracy AP American Government and Politics Spring 2011 Wolski Name TRUE/FALSE. Write 'T' if the statement is true and 'F' if the statement is

More information

The President of the United States

The President of the United States The President of the United States Objectives: Qualifications & terms of office for the presidency. Duties of and terms of office for the vice president. Explain the order of presidential succession. I.

More information

The Origins and Rules Governing the Office of President of the United States

The Origins and Rules Governing the Office of President of the United States The Presidency The Origins and Rules Governing the Office of President of the United States Royal Governor Earliest example of executive power in the colonies Appointees of the King Powers of appointment,

More information

Post-War United States

Post-War United States Post-War United States (1945-Early 1970s) PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES By Marty Gitlin PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES Published by Weigl Publishers Inc. 350 5th Avenue, Suite 3304 PMB 6G New York,

More information

Presidential Project

Presidential Project Birth/Death February 22, 1732, December 14, 1799 Place of Birth Pope s Creek, Westmoreland County, Virginia Ancestry English Marital Status Martha Dandridge Custis Children None, Adopted two children from

More information

The Presidency. From Chief Clerk to Chief Policy Maker

The Presidency. From Chief Clerk to Chief Policy Maker The Presidency From Chief Clerk to Chief Policy Maker 10 key questions at Convention 1. Shall the executive be one person or several? 2. Will Congress select the president? 3. Shall all citizens select

More information

The Constitution of the United States of America

The Constitution of the United States of America The Constitution of the United States of America The Federal Government is made up of 3 Branches that have individual powers, duties, and responsibilities. Qualifications to be a: *Representative *Senator

More information

The Executive Branch

The Executive Branch The Executive Branch What is the job of the Executive Branch? The Executive Branch is responsible for executing (or carrying out) the laws made by the Congress. Executive Branch The qualifications to be

More information

Museum of World Treasures

Museum of World Treasures Museum of World Treasures Presidents Vocabulary List - All entries pertain directly to artifacts or signs in our exhibits. George Washington Known as the first President of the United States in 1789. He

More information

Solutions. Algebra II Journal. Module 3: Standard Deviation. Making Deviation Standard

Solutions. Algebra II Journal. Module 3: Standard Deviation. Making Deviation Standard Solutions Algebra II Journal Module 3: Standard Deviation Making Deviation Standard This journal belongs to: 1 Algebra II Journal: Reflection 1 Respond to the following reflection questions and submit

More information

Lesson Objectives: The student will be able to... Step by Step

Lesson Objectives: The student will be able to... Step by Step Teacher Guide Time Needed: 1 Class Period Anticipate Distribute Read Project Transition to Side B. Tell Read Media Moment mini: Presidential Succession Materials: Student worksheets Student internet access

More information

US Government Review 8.1

US Government Review 8.1 Name: Class: Date: US Government Review 8.1 Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. I don t know whether you fellows ever had a load of hay fall on

More information

Chapter Fourteen. The Presidency

Chapter Fourteen. The Presidency Chapter Fourteen The Presidency CHAPTER 14 Article II The Presidency 13 2 The President The intent of the Framers: Delegates feared both anarchy and monarchy needed a strong, independent executive without

More information

GEORGETOWN LAW. Georgetown University Law Center

GEORGETOWN LAW. Georgetown University Law Center Georgetown University Law Center Scholarship @ GEORGETOWN LAW 2010 Introduction: The Adequacy of the Presidential Succession System in the 21st Century: Filling the Gaps and Clarifying the Ambiguities

More information

Qualifications for Presidency

Qualifications for Presidency Qualifications for Presidency The Presidency & The Executive Branch and the Bureaucracy Natural-born citizen Lived in U.S. for 14 years At least 35 years old Terms Each term is 4 years May be elected to

More information

Chapter 8 The Presidency - Section 1 SSCG12&13 Duties of the President President s Term Salary and Benefits

Chapter 8 The Presidency - Section 1 SSCG12&13 Duties of the President President s Term Salary and Benefits The Presidency Chapter 8 The Presidency - Section 1 SSCG12&13 Duties of the President The constitutional duties of the nation s first president,, and those of a modern president are much the same. However,

More information

Sample file. ii TLC10243 Copyright Teaching & Learning Company, Carthage, IL This book belongs to

Sample file. ii TLC10243 Copyright Teaching & Learning Company, Carthage, IL This book belongs to This book belongs to Cover photo courtesy Library of Congress archives Copyright 2000, Teaching & Learning Company ISBN No. 1-57310-243-1 Printing No. 987654321 Teaching & Learning Company 1204 Buchanan

More information

LSP In-Class Activity 5 Working with PASW 20 points Due by Saturday, Oct. 17 th 11:59 pm ANSWERS

LSP In-Class Activity 5 Working with PASW 20 points Due by Saturday, Oct. 17 th 11:59 pm ANSWERS LSP 121-405 In-Class Activity 5 Working with PASW 20 points Due by Saturday, Oct. 17 th 11:59 pm ANSWERS Statistics Age at Inauguration N Valid 44 Missing 0 Mean 54.64 Median 54.50 Mode 54 Std. Deviation

More information

OBJECTIVES Explain the reasons why the Framers created the office of the president with limits. Explain the qualifications for President and the

OBJECTIVES Explain the reasons why the Framers created the office of the president with limits. Explain the qualifications for President and the OBJECTIVES Explain the reasons why the Framers created the office of the president with limits. Explain the qualifications for President and the order of succession. Describe the various roles of the President.

More information

The Presidency. Power to Enforce the Laws. Global Studies/Civics Brahe, Cornell, Wimberly

The Presidency. Power to Enforce the Laws. Global Studies/Civics Brahe, Cornell, Wimberly The Presidency Power to Enforce the Laws Learning Target: EB 1.1 I can identify the requirements of the presidency, the purpose of the Executive Branch of government, and the main roles of the President

More information

Presidential Succession and Congressional Leaders

Presidential Succession and Congressional Leaders Catholic University Law Review Volume 53 Issue 4 Summer 2004 Article 5 2004 Presidential Succession and Congressional Leaders John C. Fortier Norman J. Ornstein Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.edu/lawreview

More information

The Presidency Flashcards Part of the AP U.S. Government collection

The Presidency Flashcards Part of the AP U.S. Government collection The Presidency Flashcards Part of the AP U.S. Government collection Overview This resource contains a collection of 38 flashcards that will help students master key Presidency concepts that may be covered

More information

Research Skills. 2010, 2003 Copyright by Remedia Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.

Research Skills. 2010, 2003 Copyright by Remedia Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the U.S.A. Research Skills U.S. Presidents REM 311 Cover Designer: Meg Turecek A Teaching Resource From 2010, 2003 Copyright by Remedia Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the U.S.A. The purchase of

More information

Puzzles, games, and trivia for hours of presidential fun! Brian Thornton

Puzzles, games, and trivia for hours of presidential fun! Brian Thornton e pl m Sa file THE presidents Book Puzzles, games, and trivia for hours of presidential fun! Brian Thornton Adams Media Avon, Massachusetts Dedication In memory of my friend Jeffrey Edward Nelson. Long

More information

w The importance of the president as leader and healer w The failure of some presidents to ameliorate tragedies w The Hoover effect

w The importance of the president as leader and healer w The failure of some presidents to ameliorate tragedies w The Hoover effect w The importance of the president as leader and healer w The failure of some presidents to ameliorate tragedies w The Hoover effect w The framers did not envision a president as powerful as the present

More information

Demographic Characteristics of U.S. Presidents

Demographic Characteristics of U.S. Presidents Hail to the Chief Demographic Characteristics of U.S. Presidents 100% male 100% Caucasian 97% Protestant 82% of British ancestry 77% college educated 69% politicians 62% lawyers >50% from the top 3% wealth

More information

Executive Branch Chapter 6 Section 1

Executive Branch Chapter 6 Section 1 Executive Branch Chapter 6 Section 1 The president of the United States carries with it a responsibility so personal as to be without parallel No one can make decisions for him Even those closest to him

More information

American Presidential Elections. The American presidential election system has produced some interesting quirks, such as...

American Presidential Elections. The American presidential election system has produced some interesting quirks, such as... American Presidential Elections The American presidential election system has produced some interesting quirks, such as..., when s Jefferson and Burr receive the same number of electoral votes, thus forcing

More information

CHAPTER 8 THE PRESIDENCY. Chapter Goals and Learning Objectives

CHAPTER 8 THE PRESIDENCY. Chapter Goals and Learning Objectives CHAPTER 8 THE PRESIDENCY Chapter Goals and Learning Objectives Ask a friend, Who is your Congressman? and you are likely to get a blank stare in return. Ask her, however, Who is the president? and she

More information

mith College Computer Science Lecture Notes Week 11 Everyday Python CSC111 Spring 2015 Dominique Thiébaut

mith College Computer Science Lecture Notes Week 11 Everyday Python CSC111 Spring 2015 Dominique Thiébaut mith College Computer Science Lecture Notes Week 11 Everyday Python CSC111 Spring 2015 Dominique Thiébaut dthiebaut@smith.edu Lists of Lists (Chapter 11 Designing with Lists and Classes) Two Types of Lists

More information

[ 3.1 ] An Overview of the Constitution

[ 3.1 ] An Overview of the Constitution [ 3.1 ] An Overview of the Constitution [ 3.1 ] An Overview of the Constitution Learning Objectives Understand the basic outline of the Constitution. Understand the basic principles of the Constitution:

More information

The Executive Branch. The Presidency

The Executive Branch. The Presidency The Executive Branch Content Standard 4: The student will examine the United States Constitution by comparing the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government as they form and transform

More information

REFLECTIONS OF A PARTICIPANT ON AMERICAN DEMOCRACY AND THE CONSTITUTION

REFLECTIONS OF A PARTICIPANT ON AMERICAN DEMOCRACY AND THE CONSTITUTION VILSACK 6.0 REFLECTIONS OF A PARTICIPANT ON AMERICAN DEMOCRACY AND THE CONSTITUTION Former Governor Thomas J. Vilsack* Good morning to everyone. I want to thank Drake University and the Belin Law Firm

More information

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore Educator Version INAUGU RATIO N DAY 'Faith in America s Future',

More information

That s An Order. Lesson Overview. Procedures

That s An Order. Lesson Overview. Procedures Lesson Overview Overview: This lesson will explore s as used by presidents of the past and present. Students will evaluate the concept of s and establish a position on the constitutionality of executive

More information

Unit IV: The Executive Branch

Unit IV: The Executive Branch Unit IV: The Executive Branch The Executive Branch Ronal d Reaga n Roosevelt was elected 4 times! The Executive Branch is discussed in Article II. The main duty of the Executive Branch execute the laws

More information

We ve looked at presidents as individuals - Now,

We ve looked at presidents as individuals - Now, We ve looked at presidents as individuals - Now, How much can a president really control, no matter what his strengths and skills? How much can a leader or anyone - determine outcomes, and how much is

More information

The Evolution of the Presidency

The Evolution of the Presidency Ushistory.org. The Evolution of the Presidency, American Government Online Textbook. http://www.ushistory.org/gov/7a.asp. Retrieved 9/22/16. Copyright 2008-2016 ushistory.org, owned by the Independence

More information

History, Evolution, and Practices of the President s State of the Union Address: Frequently Asked Questions

History, Evolution, and Practices of the President s State of the Union Address: Frequently Asked Questions History, Evolution, and Practices of the President s State of the Union Address: Frequently Asked Questions Maria A. Kreiser Research Librarian February 27, 2017 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov

More information

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Reading Essentials and Study Guide Lesson 1 Sources of Presidential Power ESSENTIAL QUESTION What are the powers and roles of the president and how have they changed over time? Reading HELPDESK Academic Vocabulary contemporary happening,

More information

o Major and minor political parties nominate candidates for president and vice president at national conventions every four years.

o Major and minor political parties nominate candidates for president and vice president at national conventions every four years. AP Government Notes: The Presidency Who Can Become President? o The delegates, after much debate, created a chief executive who had enough powers granted in the Constitution to balance those of Congress.

More information

The Federalist Era:

The Federalist Era: The Federalist Era: 1789-1801 THE FEDERALIST ERA: DOMESTIC Issues I. America in 1790 A. Population: 4 million B. U.S. was recovering from a depression C. Challenges by Britain and Spain threatened the

More information

Chapter 13:The Presidency Part 1. Academic Government 2016

Chapter 13:The Presidency Part 1. Academic Government 2016 Chapter 13:The Presidency Part 1 Academic Government 2016 What is the function, evolution, contemporary relevance, and organization of the United States Presidency and Executive Branch? 13.1: Presidential

More information

Executive Order Providing Assistance for Removal of Unlawful Obstructions of Justice in the State of Alabama September 10, 1963

Executive Order Providing Assistance for Removal of Unlawful Obstructions of Justice in the State of Alabama September 10, 1963 6 Observation Station #2 Executive Order 11118 - Providing Assistance for Removal of Unlawful Obstructions of Justice in the State of Alabama September 10, 1963 WHEREAS, on September 10, 1963, I issued

More information

Formal Powers of the Executive Branch: Diplomatic and Military. Article II, Section 2, Clause 2:

Formal Powers of the Executive Branch: Diplomatic and Military. Article II, Section 2, Clause 2: Formal Powers of the Executive Branch: Diplomatic and Military POWERS CONSTITUTIONAL FOUNDATION EXAMPLES Diplomatic Powers The president makes agreements with foreign countries, appoints ambassadors and

More information

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Order Code 98-156 GOV Updated January 29, 2001 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web The Presidential Veto and Congressional Procedure Gary L. Galemore Analyst in American National Government

More information

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT Unit Four The President and the Bureaucracy 2 1 Unit 4 Learning Objectives Running for President 4.1 Outline the stages in U.S. presidential elections and the differences in campaigning

More information

UNIT 5-1 CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENCY

UNIT 5-1 CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENCY UNIT 5-1 CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENCY STRUCTURE OF CONGRESS House of Representatives Senate Membership 435 members (apportioned by population) 100 members (two from each state) Term of office 2 years; entire

More information

THE PRESIDENCY THE PRESIDENCY

THE PRESIDENCY THE PRESIDENCY THE PRESIDENCY THE PRESIDENCY (Getting There - Qualities) Male - 100% Protestant - 97% British Ancestry - 82% College Education -77% Politicians - 69% Lawyers - 62% Elected from large states - 69% 1 The

More information

End DO NOW: To Do: (1) Write your homework in your Agenda book. (2) Read the daily schedule to get prepared for class.

End DO NOW: To Do: (1) Write your homework in your Agenda book. (2) Read the daily schedule to get prepared for class. End DO NOW: 2.12.2013 To Answer in your journal: To Do: (1) Write your homework in your Agenda book. (2) Read the daily schedule to get prepared for class. The Constitution of the United States of America

More information

Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 1

Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 1 Chapter 13: The Presidency Section 1 Presidential Roles The President acts as chief of state ceremonial head and the symbol of the America The President is the chief executive in domestic and foreign affairs.

More information

Page 1 of 27 7700 East First Place, Denver, Colorado 80230 phone: 303/364-7700 fax: 303/364-7800 www.ncsl.org Succession to Positions of Governor and Lieutenant Governor (Feb. 2009) Alabama Article 5,

More information

American Citizenship Chapter 11 Notes Powers of Congress

American Citizenship Chapter 11 Notes Powers of Congress American Citizenship Chapter 11 Notes Powers of Congress Section 1 a. The Scope of Congressional Powers B. Congressional Power a. Congress only has the powers delegated to it by the Constitution i. Cannot

More information

The Executive Branch. Answer these Civics Test questions. 2 Intermediate Level Executive Branch

The Executive Branch. Answer these Civics Test questions. 2 Intermediate Level Executive Branch The Executive Branch The White House The U.S. Constitution sets up our government with three separate branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. The largest branch of the federal government is the

More information

[ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview. [ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview. The President's Many Roles. [ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview

[ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview. [ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview. The President's Many Roles. [ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview [ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview [ 5.1 ] The Presidency An Overview The President's Many Roles chief of state term for the President as the ceremonial head of the United States, the symbol of all the

More information

7a. The Evolution of the Presidency

7a. The Evolution of the Presidency 7a. The Evolution of the Presidency South Dakota's Mt. Rushmore memorializes four of America's greatest Presidents. Washington, Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Lincoln are carved into this spectacular

More information

Chapter 11: Powers of Congress Section 4

Chapter 11: Powers of Congress Section 4 Chapter 11: Powers of Congress Section 4 Objectives 1. Describe the role of Congress in amending the Constitution and its electoral duties. 2. Describe the power of Congress to impeach, and summarize presidential

More information

understanding CONSTITUTION

understanding CONSTITUTION understanding the CONSTITUTION Contents The Articles of Confederation The Constitutional Convention The Principles of the Constitution The Preamble The Legislative Branch The Executive Branch The Judicial

More information

Franklin D. Roosevelt To George W. Bush (Education Of The Presidents) READ ONLINE

Franklin D. Roosevelt To George W. Bush (Education Of The Presidents) READ ONLINE Franklin D. Roosevelt To George W. Bush (Education Of The Presidents) READ ONLINE If you are searched for a ebook Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush (Education of the Presidents) in pdf format, then

More information

the presidents E503C035A35014F7EAAAEB48935B17E8 The Presidents 1 / 6

the presidents E503C035A35014F7EAAAEB48935B17E8 The Presidents 1 / 6 The Presidents 1 / 6 2 / 6 3 / 6 The Presidents Which President served as a lieutenant colonel in the Spanish-American war? Who was the first Democrat elected after the Civil War? Who introduced Social

More information

Daily Operations of the Executive Branch

Daily Operations of the Executive Branch Daily Operations of the Executive Branch 6 The executive branch is the branch of government that administers and enforces the nation s laws and public programs. It is an enormous operation, employing around

More information

no prerequisites Required Readings no textbook Recommended Readings

no prerequisites Required Readings no textbook Recommended Readings INR 3102 U01 (13014) International Relations of the United States Time: T/R 1700-1815, Spring 2011, Place: GC279B. Drop Date: March 4, 2011. Enrollment cap: 45 Prof. Thomas A. Breslin Office: SIPA 428

More information

CRS Report for Congress

CRS Report for Congress Order Code 98-157 Updated April 7, 2004 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Summary Congressional Overrides of Presidential Vetoes Mitchel A. Sollenberger Analyst in American National

More information

What is the Presidency?

What is the Presidency? What is the Presidency? The Presidency in the Original Constitution Many scholars believe that the presidency was vaguely defined in the Constitution in order to avoid limiting the president s power. The

More information

Vocabulary Activity 7

Vocabulary Activity 7 Vocabulary Activity 7 The President and the Executive Branch DIRECTIONS: Write true or false on the line before each definition below. If the statement is false, write the word that matches the definition

More information

CRS Report for Congress

CRS Report for Congress CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Order Code RS20443 Updated May 20, 2003 American National Government: An Overview Summary Frederick M. Kaiser Specialist in American National Government

More information

Chapter 6 Presidential Institutions. AP Government

Chapter 6 Presidential Institutions. AP Government Chapter 6 Presidential Institutions AP Government Constitutional Basis for Presidency The Presidency and the Founding The framers of the Constitution were ambivalent about executive power. 1. Colonial

More information

American Presidents American Presidents

American Presidents American Presidents American Presidents American Presidents George Washington George Washington He was the dominant military and political leader of the new United States of America from 1775 to 1799. He led the American

More information

Chapter 9: The Executive Branch. Civics: Government and Economics in Action

Chapter 9: The Executive Branch. Civics: Government and Economics in Action Chapter 9: The Executive Branch 1 Chapter Links Section 1 The Roles of the President Section 2 The Organization of the Executive Branch Section 3 Presidents and Power 2 Section 1 The Roles of the President

More information

A More Perfect Union The Three Branches of the Federal Government

A More Perfect Union The Three Branches of the Federal Government A More Perfect Union The Three Branches of the Federal Government The Presidency Video copyright 1996 by Knowledge Unlimited, Inc. Teacher s Guide copyright 2000 by Knowledge Unlimited, Inc. ISBN 1-55933-068-6

More information

U.S. Government. The Constitution of the United States. Tuesday, September 23, 14

U.S. Government. The Constitution of the United States. Tuesday, September 23, 14 U.S. Government The Constitution of the United States Background The Constitution of the United States was created during the Spring and Summer of 1787. The Framers(the people who attended the convention)

More information

President s Swearing-In Ceremony

President s Swearing-In Ceremony 1 of 6 1/4/2013 3:15 AM President s Swearing-In Ceremony ʺI 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,

More information

Notes for Government American Government

Notes for Government American Government Chapter 13 The Presidency Notes for Government American Government Section 1 The President s Job Description The Constitution grants the President six of his eight roles. The President acts as the ceremonial

More information

The Presidency CHAPTER 11 CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER SUMMARY

The Presidency CHAPTER 11 CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER SUMMARY CHAPTER 11 The Presidency CHAPTER OUTLINE I. The Growth of the Presidency A. The First Presidents B. Congress Reasserts Power II. C. The Modern Presidency Presidential Roles A. Chief of State B. Chief

More information

The Executive Branch 8/16/2009

The Executive Branch 8/16/2009 The Executive Branch 3.5.1 Explain how political parties, interest groups, the media, and individuals can influence and determine the public agenda. 3.5.2 Describe the origin and the evolution of political

More information

President of the United States: Compensation

President of the United States: Compensation Order Code RS20115 Updated January 28, 2008 President of the United States: Compensation Barbara L. Schwemle Analyst in American National Government Government and Finance Division Summary The Constitution

More information

About the Survey. Rating and Ranking the Presidents

About the Survey. Rating and Ranking the Presidents Official Results of the 2018 Presidents & Executive Politics Presidential Greatness Survey Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston Justin S. Vaughn, Boise State University About the Survey The 2018

More information

WikiLeaks Document Release

WikiLeaks Document Release WikiLeaks Document Release February 2, 2009 Congressional Research Service Report RS20115 President of the United States: Compensation Barbara L. Schwemle, Government and Finance Division August 6, 2008

More information

7.2c- The Cabinet (NROC)

7.2c- The Cabinet (NROC) 7.2c- The Cabinet (NROC) The Origin of the Cabinet The Cabinet is a team that was developed to counsel the president on various issues and to operate the various executive departments within the national

More information

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Order Code RS21089 Updated August 5, 2005 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Continuity of Government: Current Federal Arrangements and the Future Summary Harold C. Relyea Specialist

More information

8 th Notes: Chapter 7.1

8 th Notes: Chapter 7.1 Washington Takes Office: George Washington became president in 1789 and began setting up a group of advisers called a cabinet. With the Judiciary Act of 1789, Congress created a federal court system to

More information

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web CRS Report for Congress Received rough e CRS Web Order Code RS20260 July 12, 1999 Presidential Disability: An Overview Thomas H. Neale Analyst in American National Government Government and Finance Division

More information

AP United States Government & Politics EXAM: Congress and the Presidency, Ch. 12 & 13

AP United States Government & Politics EXAM: Congress and the Presidency, Ch. 12 & 13 AP United States Government & Politics EXAM: Congress and the Presidency, Ch. 12 & 13 MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) privileges

More information

5.1d- Presidential Roles

5.1d- Presidential Roles 5.1d- Presidential Roles Express Roles The United States Constitution outlines several of the president's roles and powers, while other roles have developed over time. The presidential roles expressly

More information

w The importance of the president as leader and healer w The failure of some presidents to ameliorate tragedies w The Hoover effect

w The importance of the president as leader and healer w The failure of some presidents to ameliorate tragedies w The Hoover effect w The importance of the president as leader and healer w The failure of some presidents to ameliorate tragedies w The Hoover effect w The framers did not envision a president as powerful as the present

More information

Chapter 12: The Presidency Multiple Choice

Chapter 12: The Presidency Multiple Choice Multiple Choice 1. The to the U.S. Constitution states that when the president believes that he or she is incapable of performing the duties of the office, he or she must inform Congress in writing of

More information