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Constitutional Origins: The Presidency on Paper

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Title: Constitutional Origins: The Presidency on Paper


1
Constitutional Origins The Presidency on Paper
  • Session 2

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From McKenna The Drama of Democracy, 3rd Ed.
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The Constitutional Convention
  • . . . a new event in the history of mankind.
  • The Constitution as DNA
  • Some characteristics are good and what the
    Founders intended
  • Some characteristics had unanticipated
    consequences
  • He shall take care that the laws be faithfully
    executed Article II, Section 3
  • provides the basis for extraordinary claims of
    power
  • manifestation depends on the individual and the
    circumstances
  • The president shall recommend consideration such
    Measures as he shall judge necessary and
    expedient.

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Antecedents
  • The British king
  • The colonial royal governors
  • Executives created by state constitutions
  • The Articles of Confederation

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British and Colonial Executives
  • The Constitutional Monarchy
  • The kings power was limited by Parliament
  • Parliaments laws could be vetoed by the king
  • Overcame the limitations of rule by one person
    (monarchy), rule by elites (aristocracy) and rule
    by the people (democracy) because it involved all
    three
  • Colonial Governors
  • Great powers An absolute veto, could dissolve
    the legislature, created courts and appointed
    judges
  • Was appointed by the king
  • Used these powers cautiously because the
    legislature controlled the governors salary

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  • Pitfalls of the king and colonial royal governors
  • King bribed Parliament for control and colonial
    governors behaved similarly abuses of power
  • The legislatures, in contrast, represented the
    colonists interests

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State Governors
  • 17 state constitutions were written during the
    course of the Revolutionary War
  • Strong legislatures, weak governorships and weak
    judiciary
  • Governors terms were usually short and limited
  • They shared powers with a council
  • No veto
  • Vague and weak powers

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  • One exception New York
  • Elected directly by the people
  • Three year term
  • Could be reelected
  • Office was unitary
  • Veto power subject to override
  • Appointment power subject to confirmation by the
    legislature

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Articles of Confederation
  • Fear of a strong central government at its most
    extreme
  • Equal power for each state
  • Amendments to the Articles had to be approved
    unanimously by the states
  • Powers technically rested with the Congress under
    the articles, but it had no enforcement power or
    power to tax

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The Context National Problems
  • States had overlapping claims to western lands
  • On the coast, states taxed goods imported by
    other states
  • Debt with no way to remedy debt
  • Border problems on the northern, southern, and
    western boundaries
  • A currency crises

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The Lessons
  • The design of an effective executive
  • Energy and responsibility
  • Unitary (just one person)
  • Veto power
  • Fixed salary
  • Three equal branches of government

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The Constitutional Convention
  • The Annapolis Convention (1787)
  • Shays Rebellion
  • The delegates
  • Self selection the contented stayed away
  • Former and current members of Congress under the
    Articles
  • Revolutionary War veterans
  • Young

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Creating the Presidency
  • Why it required such great ingenuity . .
  • Not something that lent itself to compromise
  • Many examples of what they did not want, not so
    many for what they did want
  • Deep ambivalence about executive power

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So, What Happened?
  • Vague became clear, weak became strong over the
    course of the Convention
  • Greater clarity
  • Madisons uncertainty and the Virginia Plan
  • Clarity did not come quickly Committee of
    Detail
  • Greater strength
  • The starting point was an executive who was
    subject to the legislature
  • During the convention, those in favor of a strong
    executive won a series of victories

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So, What Was At Issue? Unitary or Plural
  • A unitary executive is proposed
  • Cons this will grow into a monarchy
  • A single executive will be able to act more
    quickly
  • Responsibility can be attributed to an individual
    more readily than to a group
  • A plural executive is proposed
  • This will provide for greater stability and
    greater representation

Old versus young the older delegates favored a
plural executive because of their experiences
with the king and with colonial governors
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So, What Was At Issue? A Council
  • Unitary
  • Energy, dispatch, responsibility
  • A dual role for a judiciary would violate the
    separation of powers
  • A council appointed by the legislature
  • Council
  • Can veto acts of the legislature
  • An advisory council composed of the heads of the
    executive departments

No consensus formed and the idea was abandoned.
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