Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byOphelia Meagan Shields Modified over 8 years ago
1
The Presidency
2
2 Qualifications: 1. “A natural-born citizen” 2. Be at least 35 years of age 3. Have lived in the United States for at least 14 years.
3
3 The Presidency Presidential Roles: 1.Chief of State 2.Chief Executive 3.Chief Administrator 4.Chief Diplomat 5.Commander-in-Chief 6.Chief of Party 7.Chief Citizen
4
4 The Presidency Chief of State The ceremonial head of the government of the United States. The symbol of all the people of the nation. In many countries the Chief of State reigns but does not rule. (i.e. Queen of England & Denmark, Emperor of Japan, King of Norway & Sweden) “the personal embodiment and representative of their dignity and majesty.” - President William Howard Taft (27)
5
5 The Presidency Chief Executive Vested by the Constitution with “the executive power of the United States” Broad powers in both domestic and foreign affairs. Often described as “the most powerful office in the world.”
6
6 The Presidency Chief Administrator Heads one of the largest government machines the world has known (The Federal Government). Employs more than three million civilians and spends more than $1.6 trillion a year (not including current military expenses).
7
7 The Presidency Chief Diplomat The main architect of American foreign policy. The nation’s chief spokesperson to the rest of the world.
8
8 The Presidency Commander-in-Chief In-charge of the nation’s armed forces. Nearly two million men and women in uniform and all the power in the nation’s military arsenal are subject to the President’s direct and immediate control.
9
9 The Presidency Chief Legislator The main architect of the nation’s public policies. Sets the overall shape of the congressional agenda to get Congress to enact much of the major legislation that it does.
10
10 The Presidency Chief of Party (not an official role as prescribed by the Constitution) Leader of the political party that controls the executive branch.
11
11 The Presidency Chief Citizen (not an official role as prescribed by the Constitution) “the representative of all the people” The one to work for and represent the public interest against the many private interests. “The presidency is not merely an administrative office. That is the least of it. It is preeminently a place of moral leadership.” - FDR
12
12 The Presidency Term of Office Four-year term “long enough period for a President to have gained experience, demonstrated his abilities, and established stable policies” – Alexander Hamilton Until 1951, the Constitution placed no limit on the number of terms a President might serve. “no-third-term tradition” became an unwritten rule in presidential politics until FDR, who was elected to 4 terms.
13
13 The Presidency Term of Office (cont’d) 22 nd Amendment (1951) “No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once.” Two full terms = 8 years Presidents LBJ & Jimmy Carter advocated one six-year term.
14
14 The Presidency Pay & Benefits $400,000 salary per year $50,000 a year expense account White House (132 room mansion) set on an 18.3 acre estate Suite of offices and a large staff Yacht, fleet of automobiles, Private plane (Air Force One), other planes & helicopters, Camp David (resort in Maryland) Medical, dental, other health care Travel & entertainment funds Lifetime pension: $143,800 a year Presidential widows: $20,000 a year
15
15 The Presidency Presidential Succession 4. Secretary of State 5. Secretary of the Treasury 6. Secretary of Defense 7. Attorney General 8. Secretary of the Interior 9. Secretary of Agriculture 10. Secretary of Commerce 11. Secretary of Labor 12. Secretary of Health & Human Services 13. Secretary of Housing & UD 14. Secretary of Transportation 15. Secretary of Energy 16. Secretary of Education 17. Secretary of Veteran Affairs 1. Vice President 2. Speaker of the House 3. President pro tempore of the Senate
16
16 The Presidency Vice Presidents Who Succeeded to the Presidency John Tyler – on the death (pneumonia) of William Henry Harrison, April 4, 1841. Millard Fillmore – on the death (gastroenteritis) of Zachary Taylor, July 9, 1850. Andrew Johnson – on the death (assassination) of Abraham Lincoln, April 15, 1865. Chester A. Arthur – on the death (assassination) of James A. Garfield, September 19, 1881. Theodore Roosevelt – on the death (assassination) of William McKinley, September 14, 1901. Calvin Coolidge – on the death (undisclosed) of Warren G. Harding, August 2,1923. Harry S. Truman – on the death (cerebral hemorrhage) of FDR, April 12, 1945. Lyndon B. Johnson – on the death (assassination) of JFK, November 22, 1963. Gerald R. Ford – on the resignation of Richard M. Nixon, August 9, 1974. Presidential Succession Vice President “I am Vice President. In this I am nothing, but I may be everything.” – John Adams Two formal duties of the Vice President: 1.Preside over the Senate 2.Help decide the question of presidential disability.
17
17 The President’s Cabinet Secretary of StateSecretary of the Treasury Secretary of DefenseAttorney General Secretary of the InteriorSecretary of Agriculture Secretary of CommerceSecretary of Labor Secretary of Health & Human Services Secretary of Housing & Urban Development Secretary of TransportationSecretary of Energy Secretary of EducationSecretary of Veteran Affairs1717
18
18 The President’s Cabinet Secretary of Homeland Security Ambassador to the United Nations
19
19 Homework Answer the following questions: 1.Who are President-elect Obama’s current choices for his cabinet? 2.What two major jobs do the cabinet members have?
20
20 The Presidency Rating the Presidents “The Great Presidents” George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, FDR “The Near Great Presidents” Andrew Jackson, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman “The Above Average Presidents” John Adams, James Madison, James Monroe, JQ Adams, James K. Polk, Grover Cleveland, Dwight Eisenhower, JFK, Lyndon Johnson
21
21 The Presidency Rating the Presidents “The Average Presidents” Martin Van Buren, Rutherford B. Hayes, Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, William Howard Taft, Herbert Hoover, Gerald R. Ford, Jimmy Carter “The Below Average Presidents” John Tyler, Zachary Taylor, Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Calvin Coolidge, Richard Nixon “The Failures” Ulysses S. Grant and Warren G. Harding
22
22 The Presidency So how would you rate the following Presidents? Give an explanation as to why you would rate them the way you did. 40 th Ronald W. Reagan 41 st George H.W. Bush 42 nd William J. Clinton 43 rd George W. Bush
23
23 The Presidency How do you think our 44 th President, Barack Obama will rated? Why?
24
24 The Presidency Powers of the Presidency Article II of the Constitution: “The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.” Executive Powers: Command the armed forces Make treaties Approve or veto acts of Congress Send & receive diplomatic representatives Grant pardons & reprieves “to take care that the laws be faithfully executed.”
25
25 The Presidency The people have demanded that the Federal Gov’t play a larger role in a long list of areas of public concern. They have also looked to the presidency for leadership in these matters. EconomyWar in Iraq Health CareMiddle East EnergyHomeland Security AbortionEducation Crime & Gun Control Environment DrugsCivil Rights
26
26 The Presidency President-elect Obama’s advisors are considering a “buy American” provision in the economic-stimulus legislation that the incoming administration has made its first priority. Do you think the “buy American” provision is a good idea? If so, why? If not, why not?
27
27 The Presidency The Inauguration Countdown 15 days to Inauguration Date: January 20 th (Tuesday in 2009) Time: Noon Where: Washington D.C., Capitol Building Procedure: Oath of Office administered by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, 21-gun salute, speech by the newly sworn in President, formal lunch hosted by members of Congress, The President will lead a parade of more than 10,000 people and dozens of floats back to the White House, 9 official balls and twice as many unofficial parties.
28
28 The Presidency Inaugural Firsts (since FDR) 3/4/1933 – Oldest bible used in an Inauguration (1686 Dutch bible) - FDR 1/20/1937 - First January 20 th Inauguration (20 th Amendment) – FDR 1/20/1949 - First Inauguration televised – Harry S. Truman 1/20/1961 – First Inauguration televised in color – JFK 1/20/1965 – First use of a bulletproof, closed limousine – LBJ 1/20/1981 – First closed-captioned TV broadcast for the hearing impaired – Ronald Reagan 1/20/1985 – First time TV camera was placed inside the President’s limo & Coldest Inauguration on record – Ronald Reagan 1/20/1987 – First time Inauguration was broadcast live on the Internet – Bill Clinton 1/20/2005 – First Inauguration since 9/11/01 & tightest security ever (more than 100 square blocks closed off, 6,000 police officers and 7,000 troops deployed, fighter jet patrols, chemical sensors) – George W. Bush
29
29 The Presidency U.S. Presidential Trivia Smallest President = James Madison 5’4” 100 lbs Tallest President = Abraham Lincoln 6’4” Heaviest President = William Howard Taft more than 300 lbs Oldest President Elected = Ronald Reagan 69 years old Youngest President Elected = JFK 43 years old Youngest President to serve = Theodore Roosevelt 42 years old First President to throw out the “first pitch” at a baseball game = William Taft, opening day 4/4/1910 Washington Senators v. Philadelphia Athletics Birthplace of the most Presidents = Virginia (8) Father & son Presidents = George H.W. Bush & George W. Bush and John Adams & John Quincy Adams
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.