CHAPTER 14:1-2: Growth of Presidential Power

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Transcription:

CHAPTER 14:1-2: Growth of Presidential Power

Chapter 14:1-2 Objectives: o Students will examine the historical and ongoing debate over the proper scope of presidential power. o Students will examine the ways in which presidential power has grown over time.

And Samuel told all the words of the LORD unto the people that asked of him a king. And he said, This will be the manner of the king that shall reign over you: He will take your sons, and appoint them for himself, for his chariots, and to be his horsemen; and some shall run before his chariots. And he will appoint him captains over thousands, and captains over fifties; and will set them to ear his ground, and to reap his harvest, and to make his instruments of war, and instruments of his chariots. I Samuel 8:10-12

CHAPTER 14:1 Growth of Presidential Power: o Debate over Presidency of the early framers. o Article II states, The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.

CHAPTER 14:1 Growth of Presidential Power: o The Constitution deals with the powers of the Presidency in a very sketchy fashion. o Some express powers of the President include: o the power to command the armed forces, o to make treaties, o to approve or veto acts of Congress, o to send and receive diplomatic representatives, o to grant pardons and reprieves, o and to take care that the laws be faithfully executed.

CHAPTER 14:1 Growth of Presidential Power: o Thomas Jefferson feared that the President would be a tyrant or king. o Alexander Hamilton and James Madison persuaded the Constitutional Convention to establish a single executive, chosen independently of Congress and with its own distinct field of powers.

WHY PRESIDENTIAL POWER HAS GROWN: (1) Unity of the Presidency. o The office and its powers are held by one person. o The President is the single, commanding head of the executive branch. o On the other hand Congress has to contend with two houses.

WHY PRESIDENTIAL POWER HAS GROWN: (2) The influence the President themselves had on the office. o Pressures from the increasingly complex nature of the nation s social and economic life.

WHY PRESIDENTIAL POWER HAS GROWN: o As the U.S. become more industrialized, and technologically centered, the people have demanded the Federal Government play a larger role in a long list of areas of public concern, such as civil rights, health care, etc.

WHY PRESIDENTIAL POWER HAS GROWN: (3) In times of national emergency most notably times of war. o The ability of the President, the single, commanding chief executive to act in such situations has done much to strengthen the executive power.

WHY PRESIDENTIAL POWER HAS GROWN: (4) Congress itself has had a major hand in strengthening the presidency, especially as it has passed the thousands of laws that have been an essential part of the historic growth of the Federal Government. o Congress has neither the time nor the technical knowledge to do much more than provide the basic outlines of public policy. o It has been forced to delegate substantial authority to the executive branch.

WHY PRESIDENTIAL POWER HAS GROWN: (5) President s role as chief legislator, party leader, and chief citizen. o President can also attract public attention through his use of the media, a means of communication with the people such as the press, radio, and television to that end. o However President s power has been checked both by Congress and the Supreme Court.

14:2: Executing the Law: o As chief executive, the President executes enforces, administers, carries out the provisions of federal law. o The power to do so rests on two brief constitutional provisions. o The first of them is the oath of office the President must take: I do solemnly swear (or affirm), that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States.

14:2: Executing the Law: o The President s power to execute the law covers all federal laws. o Their number, and the different subject matters they cover, nearly boggle the mind. o The armed forces, social security, civil rights, housing, taxes, environmental pollution, collective bargaining, farm price supporters, public health, and immigration these only begin the list, there are scores of others.

14:2: Executing the Law: o The Constitution requires the President to execute all federal laws no matter what the chief executives own view of any of them may be. o But the President may and does, use some discretion as to how vigorously and in what particular way any given law will be applied in practice.

14:2: Executing the Law: o Many laws that Congress passes are written in fairly broad terms. o Congress sets out the basic policies and standards. o The specific details, much of the fine print, necessary to actual, day-to-day administration of the law, are usually left to be worked out in the executive branch.

14:2: Executing the Law: o For example, all immigrants seeking permanent admission to this country must be able to read and understand some dialect or language. o But what does this literacy requirement mean in everyday practice? o How well must an alien be able to read and write? o What words in some language must he or she know, and how many of them? o The law does not say, that is up to the INS and Department of Justice.

THE ORDINANCE POWER: o President is the Chief Administrator as well as Chief executive. o The job of administrating and applying most federal law is the day-to day work of all of the many departments, bureaus, offices, boards, commissions, councils, and other agencies that make up the huge executive branch of the Federal Government.

THE ORDINANCE POWER: o All of the some three million men and women who staff those agencies are subject to the President s control and direction. o The President has the power to issue executive orders. o An executive order is a directive, rule or regulation that has the effect of law. o The power to issue these orders, the ordinance power, arises from two sources: the Constitution and acts of Congress.

THE ORDINANCE POWER: o This is an implied power that is clearly intended. o In granting certain powers to the President, the Constitution obviously anticipates their use. o In order to exercise those powers, the President must have the power to issue the necessary orders, as well as the power to implement them. o The President must also have the power to authorize his subordinates to issue such orders.

THE APPOINTING POWER: o The Constitution provides that the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate shall appoint ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls, judges of the Supreme Court, and all other officers of the United States whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for but the Congress may by law best the appointment of such inferior officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of the department.

THE APPOINTING POWER: o President names only a handful of the nearly three million federal civilian employees. o Many of the handful appointed by the President fills the top spots in the White House Office. o With the Senate s consent, the President names most of the top-ranking officers of the Federal Government. o Among them are ambassadors and other diplomats; cabinet members and their top aides; the heads of such independent agencies as the EPA, etc.

THE APPOINTING POWER: o When the President makes one of these appointments, the nomination is sent to the Senate where the support of a majority of the senators present and voting is needed for confirmation.

THE APPOINTING POWER: o Unwritten rule of senatorial courtesy plays an important part in this process. o The rule applies to the choice of those federal officers who serve within a state, a federal district judge or a federal marshal, for example. o The rule holds that the Senate will approve only those federal appointees acceptable to the senator or senators of the President s party from the State involved.

THE APPOINTING POWER: o The practical effect of this custom, which is closely followed in the Senate, is to place a meaningful part of the President s appointing power in the hands of particular senators.

REMOVAL POWER: o The power to remove is the other side of the appointment coin, and it is as critically important to presidential success as the power to appoint. o Except for mention of the little-used impeachment process, however, the Constitution does not say how or by whom appointed officers maybe dismissed, whether for incompetence, for opposition to presidential policies, or for any other cause.

REMOVAL POWER: o The first Congress gave to the President the power to remove any office he appointed, except federal judges. o Over the years since then, Congress has sometimes tried with little success, to restrict the President s freedom to dismiss.

Exceptions: o Congress does have the power to set the conditions under which a member of the FTC and other such agencies might be removed by the President. o It did so because those agencies, the independent regulatory commissions, are not purely executive agencies.

Exceptions: o FDR wanted to remove the commissioner of the FTC because he went against FDR s policies. o The rule is that the creation of the FTC had a provision where it states, inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.

Discussion Questions: Do you think the president has too much power? Do you think the power of the presidency should increase during times of war or crisis to the expense of our personal liberties?