The Executive Branch - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 44
About This Presentation
Title:

The Executive Branch

Description:

The Executive Branch – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:136
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 45
Provided by: IredellSta168
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Executive Branch


1
The Executive Branch
2
The Executive Branch
  • Enforces Laws
  • Article II of the Constitution
  • Leader is the President

3
Qualifications
  • 35 years old
  • Been a resident of the U.S. for 14 years
  • A natural born citizen
  • President takes an oath to uphold the Constitution

4
Terms and Benefits
  • 4 year term
  • Limited to 2 terms (22nd Amendment)
  • Salary - 400,000/year
  • 50,000 expense account, 100,000 for travel, and
    19,000 for entertainment
  • Secret Service Protection for 10 years after
    presidency
  • Clinton last lifetime protected president.
  • Pension 191,000 after they retire plus travel
    funds and franking privilege

5
The Presidents Job
  • The Presidents main job is to carry out the laws
    passed by Congress.
  • The Constitution gives the president power to
    veto, call Congress into special session, serve
    as commander-in-chief, and receive foreign
    officials.
  • The president can also make treaties, appoint
    judges and top government officials, and pardon
    convicted criminals

6
Jobs of the President
  • The Constitution also requires the president to
    give Congress an update of the nation with the
    State of the Union address.
  • The president discusses the most important issues
    facing the nation and describes new legislation
    he would liked passed.

7
Vice-President
  • Official Duties
  • President of the Senate
  • Second in Line of succession 25th amendment
  • Decides Presidential disability 25th
  • Qualifications are the same as president
  • Unofficial duty Balance the ticket

8
Presidential Succession
  • Vice President
  • Speaker of the House
  • President Pro Tempore
  • Secretary of State
  • Pg 168 for the rest of list

9
What is a naturalized citizen?
  1. A citizen born in the U.S.
  2. An immigrant who wants to become a citizen
  3. An immigrant who became a citizen
  4. A citizen born in a territory of the U.S.

10
Electing the President
  • The Primaries
  • States hold primary elections to vote for the
    candidates who will run for president under each
    party
  • Nominating Conventions
  • A meeting held by each party to officially select
    the candidate who will run
  • General Election
  • 1st Tuesday after the 1st Monday of November
  • Electoral College
  • Elects the President

11
The Electoral College
  • Popular vote
  • total number of people voting for a candidate -
    occurs but has no role in deciding the president
  • 538 votes exist in the Electoral College
  • Each state gets the same number of electors as
    representatives in Congress
  • 435 Representatives 100 Senators 3 from
    Washington D.C.
  • NC 15 electoral votes
  • A candidate needs 270 to win (majority)
  • Winner Take All every state but Maine
    Nebraska
  • If a candidate wins the majority vote in a state,
    all electoral votes go to that candidate
  • Vote in December Joint session of Congress
    counts votes

12
Meeting of Electoral College
13
Which of the following is a potential problem
with the Electoral College?
  1. Its Non-Democratic
  2. A candidate may get the most votes but not win
  3. Electors are not bound
  4. 3rd party candidates have no chance

14
Problems with the Electoral College
  • Seems non-democratic votes are not proportional
  • May get the most votes and still lose
  • Electors are not bound could change their
    ballot
  • 3rd party candidates have really no chance

15
Electors of the Electoral College
  • NORTH CAROLINA - 15 Electoral Votes
  • State Law - 163-212 (Violation cancels vote
    elector is replaced and is subject to 500 fine.)
  • NEW MEXICO - 5 Electoral Votes
  • State Law - 1-15-5 to 1-15-9 (Violation is a
    fourth degree felony.)
  • 24 States that dont have laws requiring electors
    to vote for the popular vote. faithless
    electors
  • ARIZONA - ARKANSAS - DELAWARE - GEORGIA IDAHO -
    ILLINOIS -INDIANA - IOWA - KANSAS - KENTUCKY -
    LOUISIANA - MINNESOTA - MISSOURI NEW HAMPSHIRE -
    NEW JERSEY - NEW YORK - NORTH DAKOTA
    -PENNSYLVANIA - RHODE ISLAND - SOUTH DAKOTA -
    TENNESSEE - TEXAS - UTAH - WEST VIRGINIA -

16
The presidential election, however, is not
decided on the basis of the number of people who
vote for each candidate but on the basis of the
electoral college. Under the US electoral system,
each state in the union contributes a certain
number of electors to the electoral college, who
vote according to the majority in their state.
The candidate receiving a majority of the votes
in the electoral college wins the election. The
electors are apportioned roughly according to
states' populations, as measured by the census,
but with a small but deliberate bias in favor of
smaller states. We can represent the effects of
the electoral college by scaling the sizes of
states to be proportional to their number of
electoral votes, which gives a map that looks
like this
17
Offices in the Executive Branch
  • Includes the White House Office
  • Serves the President

18
Executive Office of the President (EOP)
  • Created by FDR 1939
  • Assists the President in doing his job
  • Includes over 2000 employees and 100 million
    budget
  • Prepares reports, drafts bills, checks the work
    of various executive agencies

19
Executive Office of the President (EOP)
  • Chief of Staff decides what issues are brought
    to the President
  • Press Secretary provides reporters with news
  • Office of Management Budget prepares the
    nations budget makes reports to the President
    on the fiscal soundness of the nation
  • National Security Council provides for the
    safety of the nation CIA gathers information
    on other nations
  • Core of EOP is the White House Office 500
    people who work for the President

20
White House Positions
  • Chief of Staff Denis McDonough
  • Press Secretary Jay Carney
  • Senior Advisors to the President Valerie
    Jarrett and Jennifer Palmieri

21
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
  • Prepares the federal budget and helps the
    President monitor government spending
  • Federal budget lays out the administrations plans
    and goals for the upcoming year

22
National Security Council (NSC)
  • Helps President coordinate the military and
    construct foreign policy.
  • Includes the V.P., Sec. of State, Sec. of
    Defense, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
    and top commanders of each of the armed forces.
  • Forms our nations foreign policies and principles
    of the U.S. Supervises the CIA.

23
Council of Economic Advisers (CEA)
  • Contains three independent members or economists
  • Advise the President about economic matters
    employment in the U.S., tax policy, inflation,
    trade with other countries, etc.

24
Department Heads
  • Must be approved by the Senate
  • Any advice given to the President will usually be
    on issues related to their departments
  • President will determine when they meet and how
    much to rely on their advise.

25
The Federal Bureaucracy
  • The Executive Branch is shaped like a triangle.
  • Top down President
  • depts
  • hundreds of executive agencies

26
The Federal Bureaucracy (cont.)
  • Departments and agencies carry out government
    programs in 3 ways
  • Develop procedures for putting new laws into
    practice
  • Administer day-to-day operations of government
  • Regulate or police various governmental
    activities
  • This all helps shape government policy

27
Federal Bureaucracy
  • Red Tape inefficiency caused by rules and
    regulations
  • Each person has a designed function must
    operate within a chain of command

28
Independent agencies
  • Not a part of any cabinet, but still have to
    report out to the President
  • 3 types Executive Agencies
  • Government Corporations
  • Regulatory Commissions

29
Executive Agencies
  • Specialized areas of government
  • President chooses the head of each agency
  • Examples
  • EPA Environmental Protection Agency
  • FDA Food and Drug Administration
  • CDC Center for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Others NASA, FED, NSA, FDA

30
Regulatory Commissions
  • DOES NOT REPORT TO THE PRESIDENT
  • President appoints the head of regulatory
    commissions but only Congress can remove
    (impeach)
  • Protects the public by making and enforcing rules
    for certain industries
  • Ex. FCC, FAA
  • Controls certain types of business
  • Must be impartial with no political pressure
  • Run by a board appointed by the President and
    approved by the Senate
  • US Nuclear Regulatory Commission

31
Government Corporations
  • Similar to private corporations but the
    government owns and runs them.
  • General manager board of directors runs each
    corporation
  • They charge for services, but are not supposed to
    make a profit, all goes back into the business
  • Examples
  • Post Office
  • Sallie Mae, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac

32
Law Enforcement Agencies
  • Assist in enforcing laws
  • Federal
  • FBI handles violations of federal law
  • Counterfeiting
  • Bank Robbery
  • Espionage spying
  • Kidnapping
  • SBI state violations of state law
  • Highway patrol
  • Murder if suspect body stay in state
  • County the county
  • Local Police

33
Civil Service System
  • Spoils System giving federal jobs to people
    that helped the winner To the Victor belong
    the Spoils
  • Government grew more and more incompetent as
    people who werent qualified filled positions
    (late 1800s)
  • Americans demanded change (Progressives)

34
Civil Service System Cont.
  • Reformed system came about called the Merit
    System
  • Pendleton Act (1883) instituted the Merit
    system where those most qualified get the jobs
  • Jobs are divided into 2 categories
  • Classified jobs given based on exams kept no
    matter who is president
  • Unclassified jobs filled by appointment as in
    the spoils system Appointed positions

35
Civil Service System Cont.
  • Hatch Act (1939)
  • Forbids civil servants from working in a campaign
    or participating in party politics
  • Office of Personnel Management administers
    tests and hires workers
  • Merit System Protection Board handles
    promotions based on merit

36
Political Appointees
  • Top department jobs usually go to political
    appointees
  • Employment usually ends when the President leaves
    office
  • 90 of national government employees are civil
    service workers
  • Hiring is usually based on open, competitive
    examinations and merit.
  • Before 1883, hiring was based on who you knew

37
The President and Cabinet
38
Presidents Cabinet Departments
  • 15 Executive department heads advisers
  • Makes the presidents job easier by dividing the
    work
  • Head of the Dept of Justice is the Attorney
    General. All other heads are have the title of
    secretary
  • Department of Homeland Security most recent
    addition terrorism
  • President Washingtons Cabinet Department of
    State, Department of Treasury and Department of
    War

39
Cabinet Cont.
  • State Secretary of State manages relations
    with other countries
  • Treasury Secretary of Treasury manages the
    nations money
  • Defense Secretary of Defense manages the
    military

Jack Lew
John Kerry
Chuck Hagel
40
Cabinet Cont.
  • Justice Attorney General legal affairs and
    the chief law enforcement officer in the US
  • Interior Secretary of the Interior manages
    public lands and natural resources
  • Agriculture Secretary of Agriculture designed
    to help farmers

Eric Holder
Sally Jewell
Tom Vilsack
41
Cabinet Cont.
  • Commerce Secretary of Commerce trade and
    promotes US business and tourism
  • Labor Secretary of Labor deals with working
    conditions and wages
  • Transportation Secretary of Transportation
    manages highways, railroads, airlines, and sea
    traffic

Thomas E Perez
Anthony Foxx
Penny Pritzker
42
Cabinet Cont.
  • Energy Secretary of Energy tries to find
    alternative sources of energy
  • Health and Human Services Secretary of HHS
    well being and health of Americans
  • Veterans Affairs Secretary of Veterans Affairs
    services for armed forces veterans

Ernest Moniz
Sylvia Matthews Burwell
Robert McDonald
43
Cabinet Cont.
  • Education Secretary of Education advice and
    funding for schools
  • Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary
    of Housing and Urban Development special needs
    and problems of cities
  • Homeland Security Secretary of Homeland
    Security oversees Americas defenses against
    terrorist attacks

Jeh Johnson
Julian Castro
Arne Duncan
44
State of the Union
  • President addresses Congress every year to
    discuss his/her goals and concerns
  • Required by the Constitution
  • He shall from time to time give to Congress
    information of the State of the Union and
    recommend to their Consideration such measures as
    he shall judge necessary and expedient. Article
    II, Section 3
  • Congress is in joint session both houses are
    together to hear the President speak
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com