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The Presidency

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Title: The Presidency


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(No Transcript)
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12
The Presidency
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Video The Big Picture
12
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDI
A_1/polisci/presidency/Edwards_Ch12_The_Presidency
_Seg1_v2.html
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12
Edwards Learning Objectives
Characterize the expectations for and the
backgrounds of presidents and identify paths to
the White House and how presidents may be removed
12.1
Evaluate the presidents constitutional powers
and the expansion of presidential power
12.2
5
12
Edwards Learning Objectives
Describe the roles of the vice president,
cabinet, Executive Office of the President, White
House staff, and First Lady
12.1
Assess the impact of various sources of
presidential influence on the presidents ability
to win congressional support
12.4
6
12
Edwards Learning Objectives
Analyze the presidents powers in making national
security policy and the relationship between the
president and Congress in this arena
12.3
Identify the factors that affect the presidents
ability to obtain public support
12.6
7
12
Edwards Learning Objectives
Characterize the presidents relations with the
press and news coverage of the presidency
12.7
Assess the role of presidential power in the
American democracy and the presidents impact on
the scope of government
12.8
8
Video The Basics
12
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDI
A_1/polisci/presidency/Seg2_The_Presidency_v2.html
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The Presidents
12.1
  • Great Expectations
  • Who They Are
  • How They Got There

10
Great Expectations
12.1
  • Are expectations realistic?
  • Ensure peace, prosperity and security
  • Power does not match responsibilities
  • Cognitive dissonance
  • Americans want strong leader but fear
    concentration of power
  • We want government to be small and limited, yet
    solve all societal and economic problems

11
12.1
Bring in the new guy
12
Who They Are
12.1
  • Basic requirements
  • Natural-born citizen
  • 35 years of age or older
  • Resident of the U.S. for previous 14 years
  • White, male, Protestant
  • First female president?

13
12.1
TABLE 12.1 Recent Presidents
14
How They Got There
12.1
  • Elections The Typical Road to the White House
  • Twenty-Second Amendment (1951)
  • Succession
  • Twenty-Fifth Amendment (1967)
  • Impeachment
  • Watergate
  • Clintons sex scandal

15
12.1
TABLE 12.2 Incomplete Presidential Terms
16
12.1
Nixon Resigns
17
12.1
12.1 Which amendment creates a means for
selecting a vice president when the office
becomes vacant?
  1. Twenty-second Amendment
  2. Twenty-fifth Amendment
  3. Twelfth Amendment
  4. Tenth Amendment

18
12.1
12.1 Which amendment creates a means for
selecting a vice president when the office
becomes vacant?
  1. Twenty-second Amendment
  2. Twenty-fifth Amendment
  3. Twelfth Amendment
  4. Tenth Amendment

19
Presidential Powers
12.2
  • Constitutional Powers
  • Expansion of Power
  • Perspectives on Presidential Power

20
Video In Context
12.2
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDI
A_1/polisci/presidency/Seg3_Presidency_v2.html
21
Constitutional Powers
12.2
  • Constitution says little
  • The executive power shall be vested in a
    president of the United States of America.
  • Fear of abuse of power
  • Madisonian system
  • Shared powers
  • Checks and balances
  • Short term of office

22
12.2
TABLE 12.3 Constitutional Powers of the President
23
Expansion of Power
12.2
  • Changes leading to expansion of presidential
    power
  • Military
  • Technological
  • Economic
  • Presidents take initiative to expand role
  • Lincoln
  • FDR

24
Perspectives on Presidential Power
12.2
  • 1950s-1960s
  • Strong good weak bad
  • 1970s
  • Vietnam War
  • Watergate
  • 1980s and beyond
  • Mixed feeling about presidential power

25
12.2
12.2 Which of the following is NOT an enumerated
power of the president?
  • Make treaties with other nations
  • Veto legislation
  • Nominate ambassadors
  • Declare war

26
12.2
12.2 Which of the following is NOT an enumerated
power of the president?
  • Make treaties with other nations
  • Veto legislation
  • Nominate ambassadors
  • Declare war

27
Explore the Simulation You Are a First-Term
President
12.2
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/long/long_longman_medi
a_1/2013_mpsl_sim/simulation.html?simulaURL8
28
Running the Government Chief Executive
12.3
  • Vice President
  • Cabinet
  • Executive Office
  • White House Staff
  • First Lady

29
Vice President
12.3
  • Mainly ceremonial in previous years
  • Increasing role in modern presidency
  • Cheney
  • Biden

30
Cabinet
12.3
  • Traditional, not mandated
  • Heads of federal agencies and executive
    departments

31
12.3
TABLE 12.4 Cabinet Departments
32
Executive Office
12.3
  • National Security Council (NSC)
  • Council of Economic Advisers (CEA)
  • Office of Management and Budget (OMB)

33
12.3
FIGURE 12.1 Executive Office of the President
34
White House Staff
12.3
  • Presidents personal support team
  • Chief of staff
  • Press secretary
  • Anonymous and loyal
  • President sets style and tone

35
12.3
FIGURE 12.2 Principal Offices in the White House
36
First Lady
12.3
  • No longer just a well-dressed homemaker
  • Abigail Adams
  • Edith Wilson
  • Eleanor Roosevelt
  • Hillary Rodham Clinton
  • Michelle Obama

37
12.3
Michele Obama with military families
38
12.3
12.3 What is the main duty of the Council of
Economic Advisors?
  • Advise the president on banking regulations
  • Advise the president and Congress on trade
  • Advise the president on economic policy
  • Advise the president on intelligence

39
12.3
12.3 What is the main duty of the Council of
Economic Advisors?
  • Advise the president on banking regulations
  • Advise the president and Congress on trade
  • Advise the president on economic policy
  • Advise the president on intelligence

40
Presidential Leadership of Congress Politics of
Shared Powers
12.4
  • Chief Legislator
  • Party Leadership
  • Public Support
  • Legislative Skills

41
Chief Legislator
12.4
  • State of the Union
  • Veto
  • Pocket Veto
  • Line-item veto

42
12.4
TABLE 12.5 Presidential Vetoes
43
Party Leadership
12.4
  • Bonds of Party
  • Slippage in Party Support

44
12.4
Obama with Reid and Pelosi
45
Party Leadership
12.4
  • Leading the Party
  • Presidential Coattails

46
12.4
TABLE 12.6 Congressional Gains or Losses for the
Presidents Party in Presidential Election Years
47
12.4
TABLE 12.7 Congressional Gains or Losses for the
Presidents Party in Midterm Election Years
48
Public Support
12.4
  • Influence in Congress depends on popularity
  • Public Approval
  • Electoral Mandates

49
Legislative Skills
12.4
  • Bargaining
  • Moving Fast
  • Exploiting the honeymoon period
  • Setting Priorities
  • Limited success

50
12.4
Clinton signing welfare bill
51
12.4
12.4 A president will usually have the most
legislative success when
  • he has persuasive powers with Congress and the
    public
  • he presides over good foreign relations
  • his party controls both houses of Congress
  • he has strong staff support

52
Video Thinking Like a Political Scientist
12.4
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDI
A_1/polisci/presidency/Seg4_Presidency_v2.html
53
12.4
12.4 A president will usually have the most
legislative success when
  • he has persuasive powers with Congress and the
    public
  • he presides over good foreign relations
  • his party controls both houses of Congress
  • he has strong staff support

54
President and National Security Policy
12.5
  • Chief Diplomat
  • Commander in Chief
  • War Powers
  • Crisis Manager
  • Working with Congress

55
Chief Diplomat
12.5
  • Extending diplomatic recognition
  • Treaties
  • Executive agreements

56
12.5
Carter with Begin and Sadat
57
Commander in Chief
12.5
  • President can deploy troops
  • Congress must declare war, appropriate funds
  • Framers did not envision standing army
  • Or nuclear arsenal

58
12.5
Capture of Obsama bin Laden
59
War Powers
12.5
  • War Powers Resolution (1973)
  • Presidents must seek Congressional approval
    before deploying armed forces
  • Legislative veto
  • What do you think?

60
Crisis Manager
12.5
  • What constitutes a crisis?
  • Cuban Missile Crisis
  • 9/11
  • Modern communications technology

61
12.5
Responding to 9/11
62
Working with Congress
12.5
  • Two presidencies
  • Domestic policy
  • Foreign policy

63
12.5
12.5 The president has the most influence in
  1. national security policy
  2. domestic policies
  3. public welfare
  4. public opinion

64
12.5
12.5 The president has the most influence in
  1. national security policy
  2. domestic policies
  3. public welfare
  4. public opinion

65
Power from the People Public Presidency
12.6
  • Going Public
  • Presidential Approval
  • Policy Support
  • Mobilizing the Public

66
Going Public
12.6
  • Public sentiment is everything. With public
    sentiment nothing can fail without it nothing
    can succeed.
  • Ceremonial duties build public support

67
12.6
President Bush announces end of Iraq war
68
Presidential Approval
12.6
  • Product of many factors
  • Party affiliation
  • Honeymoon period
  • Policy success
  • Integrity and leadership skills
  • Rally events

69
12.6
FIGURE 12.3 Presidential Approval
70
Explore the Presidency What Influences a
President's Public Approval?
12.6
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/long/long_edwards_mpsl
gia_16/pex/pex12.html
71
Policy Support
12.6
  • Using the bully pulpit effectively
  • Media skills
  • Public not receptive
  • Not interested in politics and government
  • Biased reasoners and partisans
  • Weak on facts

72
12.6
Reagan
73
Mobilizing the Public
12.6
  • When the people speak, Congress listens
  • This is a rare event
  • Inattentive public
  • Apathetic public
  • Congress responds to this, too

74
12.6
12.6 As a presidents time in office increases,
his approval ratings
  1. also increase
  2. generally go down
  3. remain stable
  4. decrease but rise as his term ends

75
12.6
12.6 As a presidents time in office increases,
his approval ratings
  1. also increase
  2. generally go down
  3. remain stable
  4. decrease but rise as his term ends

76
President and the Press
12.7
  • Nature of News Coverage

77
12.7
Obama press conference
78
Nature of News Coverage
12.7
  • Media serves as intermediary
  • Does not always verify facts
  • Are news outlets biased?
  • Press secretary

79
12.7
12.7 With which statement would most press
secretaries agree?
  1. The media have a liberal bias.
  2. Coverage of the presidency is generally positive.
  3. Media bias has little impact on the way the
    American people are informed.
  4. Media coverage is based solely on facts.

80
12.7
12.7 With which statement would most press
secretaries agree?
  1. The media have a liberal bias.
  2. Coverage of the presidency is generally positive.
  3. Media bias has little impact on the way the
    American people are informed.
  4. Media coverage is based solely on facts.

81
Understanding the American Presidency
12.8
  • Presidency and Democracy
  • Presidency and the Scope of Government

82
Presidency and Democracy
12.8
  • Wanting and fearing a strong president
  • Safety in checks and balances
  • What happens when government is divided?

83
Presidency and the Scope of Government
12.8
  • What made Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and
    Franklin Roosevelt noteworthy presidents?
  • Government growth not inherent in presidency
  • Ideologically conservative and operationally
    liberal

84
Video In the Real World
12.8
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDI
A_1/polisci/presidency/Seg5_The_Presidency_v2.html
85
12.8
12.8 According to the text, which of the
following is true?
  1. Divided government cannot pass legislation.
  2. Change occurs in unified as well as divided
    government.
  3. All presidents work toward increasing
    presidential power.
  4. Presidents since LBJ have championed growth of
    government.

86
12.8
12.8 According to the text, which of the
following is true?
  1. Divided government cannot pass legislation.
  2. Change occurs in unified as well as divided
    government.
  3. All presidents work toward increasing
    presidential power.
  4. Presidents since LBJ have championed growth of
    government.

87
Discussion Question
12
  • How do presidents use the power to persuade to
    implement their agenda? In what way is this
    power considered to be their most important?

88
Video So What?
12
http//media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDI
A_1/polisci/presidency/Edwards_Ch12_The_Presidency
_Seg6_v2.html
89
12
  • Further Review
  • On MyPoliSciLab
  • Listen to the Chapter
  • Study and Review the Flashcards
  • Study and Review the Practice Tests
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