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1. The structure of the Presidents advisors

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Congress has repeatedly bowed to presidential leadership (foreign policy) ... How does Bush have power compared with Chirac? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1. The structure of the Presidents advisors


1
1. The structure of the Presidents advisors
  • The Cabinet
  • The Cabinet's role is to advise the President on
    subjects relating to duties of respective offices
  • The Cabinet is composed of
  • The Vice President
  • Heads of 15 executive departments, including the
    Secretary of State

2
The Vice President
  • Richard (Dick) B. Cheney
  • His power is determined by the President
  • Presides over the Senate
  • Votes only in tie situations

3
Secretary of State
  • Condoleezza Rice
  • The highest ranking cabinet member
  • Principal adviser to ministers or consuls abroad.
  • Head of US department of State concerned with
    foreign affairs
  • Director of coordination and supervision of
    interdepartmental activities of the US government
    overseas
  • Replies to public inquiries

4
The EOP Executive Office of the President
  • EOP
  • Established in 1939
  • Composed of the Presidents personal aids and
    advisors
  • Approximately 1550 staff members
  • Principal Components
  • White House Chief of Staff
  • Office of Management and the Budget
  • National Security Council
  • Press Secretary

5
White House Chief of Staff
  • Andrew Hill Card Jr.
  • Considered the highest ranking member of the EOP
  • Senior aid to the President
  • Duties
  • Overseeing the actions of the other members of
    the White House Staff
  • Managing the Presidents timetable
  • Controlling outsiders access to the President
  • Informal Duties
  • Close Friend
  • Closest political adviser

6
Office of Management and the Budget
  • Director John Bolten
  • Responsible for assembling annual budget plans
    from departments and agencies and drawing them
    together in proposals that are submitted to
    congress.
  • Examines bills passed in Congress then advises
    the President on whether to sign or veto them

7
National Security Council
  • Stephen Hadley
  • Principal forum used by the President for
    considering national security and foreign policy
    matters
  • Role to advise and assist the President in
    matters of national security and foreign policy
  • Composition The President, regular attendees,
    military advisors, intelligence advisors,
    additional participants.

8
Press Secretary
  • Scott McClellan
  • Senior official with one step below Cabinet level
  • Role
  • To collect information about events inside the
    administration and around the world.
  • To distribute information to the media
  • To field questions from press in briefings and
    press conferences.

9
2. Role and powers of the President
  • George W. Bush
  • The American Constitution is based on the
    principle of checks and balances and
  • A system of separate institutions sharing
    powers,
  • also with regard to the powers of the President.

10
The election of the President
  • President is elected separately from the Congress
    (strong legitimization on his own)
  • Indirect election through the electoral college
  • The President is elected for 4 years and can be
    re-elected only once again
  • The Congress cant dismiss the President

11
The presidential powers
  • Head of state and
  • Head of government
  • Nomination of all senior public officials,
    ambassadors and federal judges with
    simple-majority-confirmation by the Senate, but
  • Instrument of circumvention recess
    appointments (appointments on temporary basis
    while Senate is in recess)

12
The President as commander-in-chief
  • declaration of war only allowed to the Congress,
    but
  • the President can dispatch US forces around the
    world without a formal declaration of war
    (example Vietnam War)
  • But Congress power of budget and
  • War Power Act (1973)

13
The President as chief diplomat
  • conclusion of treaties between the US and other
    nations, but
  • ratification by a 2/3 Senate majority (for
    example no ratification of the treaty of
    Versailles in 1919), but
  • possibility to circumvent the ratification
    executive agreements

14
The President as chief legislator
  • Congress legislative branch, no right to the
    government to initiate laws according to the
    Constitution, but in reality, many laws
    elaborated by the government
  • State of Union address (speech in front of the
    Congress to inform the Congress about the state
    of the union) ? legislative agenda of the
    president

15
The presidential veto power
  • pocket veto final days of legislative session,
    Bill sent for signature to the president may
    simply die if he takes no action
  • line-item-veto veto against individual items of
    a law, not its entirety

16
Other presidential powers
  • executive orders rules with force of law (in
    certain circumstances possible)
  • emergency laws
  • executive privilege the right to refuse to
    appear before or to withhold information from a
    legislative branch or a court (Watergate scandal)

17
3. Historical review the growth of the
presidential power
  • The 5 principal reasons for the growth
  • - Particular presidential styles of individual
    presidents
  • - The USA as world superpower burdens on the
    presidency as the vital center of action and
    decision have grown
  • - Congress has repeatedly bowed to presidential
    leadership (foreign policy)
  • - US Supreme Courts judgments have enlarged the
    scope of the office
  • - The size of the organizational apparatus of
    the president has grown

18
The New Deal
  • 19th century domination of the Congress
  • Turning point F. D. Roosevelt and the New Deal
    (governmental intervention into economic life) ?
    delegation of power from the Congress to the
    executive branch

19
The imperial presidency
  • Arthur M. Schlesinger
  • The growth of presidential power symbolized by US
    involvement in the Vietnam War (no formal
    declaration of war)
  • But the military defeat in Vietnam shrank also
    the presidential power

20
Limits and constraints of the presidential power
  • Treaties require a two-third Senate majority to
    be ratified
  • Nominations by the President have to be confirmed
    by a simple Senate majority (Nannygate scandal)
  • Constraints by the bureaucracy
  • Congress power of budget

21
Limits and constraints
  • Veto power can be overridden by a two-third
    Congress majority
  • The President cannot dissolve the Congress
  • Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of
    presidents actions
  • Impeachment

22
Other factors on which depend presidential
authority
  • Role of the mass media critics (Vietnam and
    Watergate)
  • Society is changing individualization
  • Popularity, personal skills as persuader,
    parties

23
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24
Discussion
  • Does the President have the power, or is he a
    puppet for his advisors, lobby groups, etc?
  • Do you think the mass media has an impact on the
    Presidents image and power?
  • After the international crisis (Iraq, war against
    terrorism), do you think the Presidents power
    has grown (united behind the President) or has
    it diminished (more critics)?
  • How does Bush have power compared with Chirac?
  • What parallels can be seen between the diplomatic
    and international leadership of Roosevelt and
    Bush?
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