Presidency Flashcards

1
Q

How are bills signed into law?

A

President chooses to sign bills

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2
Q

How many vetoes did Bush have overridden?

A

33%, 4 vetoes out of 12

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3
Q

Give types of veto

A

Standard veto
Pocket veto
(Threat of veto may be an informal use of power)

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4
Q

Name some of Clinton’s state of the union policies

A

Health reform 1994- failed to pass Congress

Assault Weapons Ban 1995- passed a successful 10 year ban

Balanced Budget 1996- failure, US government deficit continues to grow today

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5
Q

Name some of Bush’s state of the union policies

A

‘The axis of evil’ and moving against sponsors of terrorism 2002

Healthcare reform 2003- success, reform signed, making prescriptions more affordable

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6
Q

Name some of Obama’s state of the union policies

A

2016 immigration- executive action then SC

2010 Gay Rights- Don’t ask Don’t tell Repeal Act signed

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7
Q

Name some of Trump’s state of the union policies

A

2018 call to repeal Obamacare

Call for Congress to pass $1.5 trillion infrastructure bill (2018)- failure and budget shutdown

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8
Q

Factors that affect strength or weakness of president

A

Opinion polls (for mandate and authority)
Events- Shannon (personality and circumstance)
Relationship with Congress (on policy)
Pres. relationship with party
Divide and unified (partisanship)
Strength of mandate and electoral success (midterms are a referendum?)
Relationship with SC

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9
Q

Name some informal sources of presidential power

A
Electoral mandate 
Executive orders 
Events 
Cabinet 
Neustadt's powers of persuasion, use of charisma 
Support of EXOP, the WHO, OMB
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10
Q

What else is the EXOP also referred to as?

A

The West Wing

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11
Q

What is the role of the EXOP?

A
  1. POLICY ADVICE- executive branch agencies advise the president
  2. MANAGE the President- The chief of staff manage’s the president’s schedule, and therefore sets priorities
  3. OVERSEE DEPARTMENTS
  4. RELATIONS WITH CONGRESS- Office of Legislative Affairs helps president to advance on legislation
  5. SPECIALIST- some offices have a specific mandate to work on their special interest eg Obama sponsored the Office of Faith-based and Neighbourhood Partnerships
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12
Q

What is the role of the Office of management and budget?

A

OMB

Advise the president on the allocation of funds for the annual budget
Oversee spending in all federal departments and agencies

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13
Q

How do SoPs limit presidential power? (3 main reasons)

A
  1. President and Congress receive separate MANDATES
  2. The President has LIMITED PATRONAGE POWER over INDIVIDUALS in Congress- cannot promote or demote (unlike the UK) or have significant. control over party
  3. BIPARTISAN CONTROL AND DIVIDED GOV.
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14
Q

What formal power does the President have over the judicial branch?

A

Nominations- influences ideological balance

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15
Q

What factors contribute to the fluctuating nature of presidential powers?

A

Popularity
Events
The election cycle (Lame duck and mid-terms)
Judicial review

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16
Q

What actions of presidents can make them be considered imperial, and is this a valid criticism?

A
  1. Executive orders
    Eval- limited scope, cant pass on Congressional issues
  2. Signing statements (written as leg. is signed, to explain the presidents viewpoint, eg they won’t enforce a certain element of it)
    Eval- This actually has little affect, the SC and Congress can still go against this
  3. Executive agreements (agreements made between president and other countries, doesn’t need Senate ratification)
    Eval- only an agreement with the incumbent pres. not the gov. overall
  4. Unilateral war powers- times where speed is necessary, consulting Congress is not necessary
    Eval- Only powerful for short-term action, War Powers Act, pres. limited by electorate’s views
17
Q

How strong is the power of the president on foreign policy in constitutional terms?

A

STRONG- Can overcome checks from Congress
Authority on military action- commander-in-chief
Act unilaterally
Head of State and Chief Diplomat
Signing treaties
Executive agreements

WEAK- Congress declare war
Ratify treaties
Congress has funding power

18
Q

How strong is the power of the president on foreign policy in political terms?

A

STRONG- National mandate
Only nationally elected body
US citizens look for a pres. strong on foreign policy
Congresspeople are freqeunekty criticised if they attempt to take action on foreign policy alone, unlike pres.

WEAK- Congress also has a mandate as an elected body, and being highly representative with closer links to constituencies

19
Q

How strong is the power of the president on foreign policy in practical terms?

A

STRONG- Wars have become initiated much faster in modern history, the power lying with the pres. is much faster and effective in times of emergency
Advisors of the president have better knowledge of modern warfare, technology and weaponry- more specialised
Pres. may have critical, classified information

WEAK- the pres. cannot always claim speed is necessary
Sometimes great consideration and scrutiny is necessary
None of the advantages apply to trade deals and treaties
Many committees and experienced Senators have great wisdom on foreign policy eg John Kerry, Biden,