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The President of the USA

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One of the most powerful offices of its kind in the world. The president, the Constitution says, must – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The President of the USA


1
The President of the USA
2
The office of the President
  • One of the most powerful offices of its kind in
    the world.
  • The president, the Constitution says, must "take
    care that the laws be faithfully executed." To
    carry out this responsibility, the president
    presides over the executive branch of the federal
    government (about 4 million people, including 1
    million active-duty military personnel)

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4
Requirements
  • Who can become the President?
  • No person except a natural born citizen, or a
    citizen of the United States shall be eligible
    to the office of President neither shall any
    person be eligible to that office who shall not
    have attained to the age of thirty-five years,
    and been fourteen years a resident within the
    United States.
  • The
    Constitution, Article II, Section One

5
Election
  • Election every 4 years.
  • Inauguration Day taking the oath
  • I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully
    execute the Office of President of the United
    States, and will to the best of my Ability,
    preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of
    the United States.

6
Presidential oath
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v9cESC0RaVnMlistPL
    F6C5ABE020EE90E7

7
Powers of the President
  • Executive
  • Legislative
  • Judicial

8
Executive powers
  • head of the government
  • nominates and the Senate confirms the heads
    of all executive departments and agencies,
    together with hundreds of other high-ranking
    federal officials.
  • responsible for preparing the budget of the
    United States, although the Congress must approve
    it

9
Executive powers cont.
  • Within the executive branch itself, the president
    has broad powers to manage national affairs and
    the workings of the federal government. The
    president can issue rules, regulations, and
    instructions called executive orders, which have
    the binding force of law upon federal agencies
    but do not require congressional approval.

10
Military powers
  • Commander-in-chief of the armed forces
  • In times of war or national emergency, the
    Congress may grant the president even broader
    powers to manage the national economy and protect
    the security of the United States.

11
Legislative powers
  • The president can veto any bill passed by
    Congress and, unless two-thirds of the members of
    each house vote to override the veto, the bill
    does not become law.
  • May propose legislation to Congress - In annual
    and special messages to Congress, the president
    may propose legislation he believes is necessary.
  • May call Congress for special session

12
Judicial powers
  • May appoint important public officials.
    Presidential nomination of federal judges,
    including members of the Supreme Court, is
    subject to confirmation by the Senate.
  • Another significant power is that of granting a
    full or conditional pardon to anyone convicted of
    breaking a federal law except in a case of
    impeachment.

13
Powers in foreign affairs
  • Under the Constitution, the president is the
    federal official primarily responsible for the
    relations of the USA with foreign nations. The
    president appoints ambassadors, ministers, and
    consuls (subject to confirmation by the Senate)
    and receives foreign ambassadors and other public
    officials. With the secretary of state, the
    president manages all official contacts with
    foreign governments.

14
What can remove the President from office?
  • Death
  • Impeachment
  • Inability (when Vice President takes over)

15
Grounds for impeachment
  • Treason
  • Bribery
  • Other crimes and misdemeanors
  • Article II, Section
    Four

16
Impeachment
  • Removing an official from office requires two
    steps (1) a formal accusation, or impeachment,
    by the House of Representatives, and (2) a trial
    and conviction by the Senate.
  • Impeachment requires a majority vote of the
    House conviction is more difficult, requiring a
    two-thirds vote by the Senate.

17
Who has been impeached?
  • Andrew Johnson in 1868 one vote short
  • Richard Nixon in 1974 - resigned
  • Bill Clinton in 1998
  • None convicted

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Johnsons impeachment
  • The political backing to begin impeachment
    proceedings against the president came when
    Johnson breached the Tenure of Office Act by
    removing Edwin Stanton, Secretary of War, from
    the cabinet. The Tenure of Office Act, passed
    over Johnson's veto in 1867, stated that a
    president could not dismiss appointed officials
    without the consent of Congress.
  • Johnson believed the Tenure of Office Act was
    unconstitutional

20
  • President Johnson was impeached by the House of
    Representatives on February 24, 1868 and the
    Senate tried the case in a trial that lasted from
    March to May 1868. In the end, the Senate voted
    to acquit President Andrew Johnson by a margin of
    35 guilty to 19 not guilty - one vote short of
    the two-thirds needed to convict.In a 1926
    case, the Supreme Court declared that the Tenure
    of Office Act had been invalid.

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Nixon The Watergate case
  • After five men hired by Nixon's reelection
    committee were caught burglarizing Democratic
    party headquarters at the Watergate Complex on
    June 17, 1972, President Nixon's subsequent
    behaviorhis cover-up of the burglary and refusal
    to turn over evidenceled the House Judiciary
    Committee to issue three articles of impeachment
    on July 30, 1974.

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  • The document also indicted Nixon for illegal
    wiretapping, misuse of the CIA, perjury, bribery,
    obstruction of justice, and other abuses of
    executive power.
  • Nixon resigned from office on August 9, 1974

24
Nixons resignation speech
  • http//www.history.com/videos/richard-nixons-resig
    nation-speechrichard-nixons-resignation-speech

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26
Clintons impeachment
  • Bill Clinton, 42nd President of the United
    States, was impeached by the House of
    Representatives on two charges, one of perjury
    and one of obstruction of justice, on December
    19, 1998. Two other impeachment articles, a
    second perjury charge and a charge of abuse of
    power, failed in the House. The charges arose
    from the Lewinsky scandal and the Paula Jones
    lawsuit.

27
Outcome
  • He was acquitted by the Senate on February 12,
    1999. Requiring a two-thirds majority for a
    conviction, only 50 senators (out of 100) voted
    guilty on the obstruction charge and 45 on the
    perjury charge. The Senate was 17 votes short of
    removing Clinton from office

28
The process of impeachment
  • The House of Representatives passes by vote
    Articles of Impeachment
  • The Senate tries all impeachments
  • Presiding officer is the Vice President
  • If the President is impeached, presiding officer
    is Chief Justice

29
Thank you for your attention!
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