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AMERICAN SOCIETY AND ITS INSTITUTIONS Lecture THREE/ Meeting THREE US Government The President of the United States and the election process Shape of the American Government • federal republic • federal government • state government • local government • division of powers • federal law • state law • local law • separation of powers • legislative branch – Congress • executive branch – President of the U.S.A. • judicial branch – Federal Courts (Supreme Court) • checks and balances Legislative Branch – The Congress • bicameral parliament • legislative power and a set of delegated explicit and implied powers • financial and budgetary matters (budget, taxes, loans, regulating commerce) • military matters (Congress declares war, raises the army, and makes laws for the military) • congressional oversight – power to investigate and to oversee the executive branch – through committees • power of removal – impeachment of federal officers • elections every 2 years • House of Representatives • representatives elected for 2 years • currently 435 representatives • Senate • Two Senators from each state • Senators elected for a six-year term • every two years 1/3 of the Senators elected • Vice-President is the President of the Senate Executive Branch – The President of the U.S.A • number of terms – limited constitutionally to two (1951) • The President elected for a 4 year term • presidential candidates must be natural born citizens of the U.S.A. • must be at least 35 years of age • must be a resident for 14 years • traditionally forms the cabinet (Secretaries) • executes the federal law • accepts (signs) or vetoes federal legislation – veto can be overridden by a 2/3rds majority vote in both houses • conducts foreing policy • commander-in-chief • nominates judges of federal courts (including the Supreme Court Justices) • may grant presidential pardon Judicial Branch – Federal Courts • United States district courts (currently 94 districts) • United States Circuit Courts of Appeals (currently 11 CoA's) • Supreme Court of the United States • the court of last resort • checks the law and governmental actions for constitutional inquiries • interprets the Constitution • Chief Justice and eight Associate Justices nominated by the President, confirmed by the Senate, may be impeached by Congress • Life tenure terminating upon death, resignation, retirement, or conviction on impeachment Eletction Process – Presidential Election Candidates 2016 Donald J. Trump (R) Hillary Rodham Clinton (D) Ed Baker Ajamu Baraka David Boarman Brian Briggs Darrell Castle ◄ CONSTITUTION NOMINEE Paul Chehade James "JD" Criveau Ken Cross Robert Dionisio Art Drew David Holcomb Zoltan Istvan Gary Johnson ◄ LIBERTARIAN NOMINEE John Fitzgerald Johnson Lynn Sandra Kahn Chris Keniston ◄ VETERANS PARTY NOMINEE Bishop Julian Lewis, Jr. Evan McMullin James C. Mitchell, Jr. Perry Morcom Mark Pendleton Jeremiah Pent Clifton Roberts Scott Smith Jill Stein ◄ GREEN PARTY NOMINEE Samm Tittle Benjamin Weigel Bill Weld Terry W. Wheelock Electoral Process – Presidential election • After Ballotpedia https://ballotpedia.org/ • How to become the President? • An individual can seek the nomination of a political party. Presidential nominees are selected by delegates at national nominating conventions. Individual states conduct caucuses or primary elections to determine which delegates will be sent to the national convention.[1] • An individual can run as an independent. Independent presidential candidates typically must petition each state to have their names printed on the general election ballot. For the 2016 presidential contest, it was estimated that an independent candidate would need to collect in excess of 880,000 signatures in order to appear on the general election ballot in every state.[1] • An individual can run as a write-in candidate. In 34 states, a write-in candidate must file some paperwork in advance of the election. In nine states, write-in voting for presidential candidates is not permitted. The remaining states do not require write-in candidates to file paperwork in advance of the election.[1] Ballot Access • Ballot Access for presidential election • An individual can seek the nomination of a staterecognized political party. • An individual can run as an independent. Independent candidates often must petition in order to have their names printed on the general election ballot. • An individual can run as a write-in candidate. • minor parties were recognized in more than 10 states • Libertarian Party: 33 states • Green Party: 21 states[3] • Constitution Party: 15 states Candidate selection process • Party nomination processes: • Presidential nominees: party local and state caucuses and primary elections and state conventions -> Party national conventions • Candidate preference Primaries • Voter registration • Currently held in 35 jurisdictions by both parties • Caucuses • Held in 13 jurisdictions by both parties • In 8 jurisdictions one party runs a primary, the other a caucus • Delegates • Selected in the primaries or caucuses or included because of their position as an elected representative or member of the party leadership • They select presidential candidate in party national conventions • Pledged delegates and nonpledged delegates (superdelegates) (D) • Bound, and unbound delegates (R) Candidates 2016 – Primaries and caucuses Election day • Election Day – popular vote (Tuesday after the first Monday of November – earliest 2 November – latest 8 November) • voters vote for electors • all states use a "short ballot„ • only few require the name of the elector added to the name of the presidential candidate Electoral College • electoral votes allocated by the number of represenatives and senators from particular states • three votes for Washington D.C. • 'winner-takes-all' with the exception of Maine and Nebraska • Nebraska and Maine divide ther Electoral Votes by congressional districts + 2 votes based on state-wide popular vote • hence – votes in popular election do not have the same 'weight': per-capita Electoral College representation differs significantly: e.g.: Wyoming vs. California – at a ratio of more than 3:1, yet, some scholars claim the opposite is true (Banzhaf power index) • Electors cast their votes on the Monday after the second Wednesday in December • 24 states have laws punishing faithless electors • the candidate to win the majority of votes (currently 270) in the Electoral Collage – wins • Electoral votes counted by a joint session of Congress on January 6 Presidential deadlocks if none of the candidates received the majority of electoral votes • House of Representatives chooses the President • House of Repr. chooses from three candidates who recieved the greatest number of electoral votes • Each state delegation votes en bloc - its members have a single vote collectively (and the District of Columbia does not receive a vote) • A candidate must receive an absolute majority of state delegation votes (currently 26) in order for that candidate to become the President-elect. • Additionally, delegations from at least two-thirds of all the states must be present for voting to take place. • The House continues balloting until it elects a President. • Senate chooses the Vice-President • Senate chooses from two candidates who recieved the greatest number of electoral votes • The Senate votes in the normal manner in this case (i.e., ballots are individually cast by each Senator, not by state delegations). • Two-thirds of the Senators must be present for voting to take place. • "majority of the whole number" of Senators (currently 51 of 100) is necessary for election. • If a deadlock continues • If the House of Representatives has not chosen a President-elect in time for the inauguration (noon on January 20), the Vice President-elect becomes Acting President until the House should select a President. If the winner of the vice presidential election is also not known by then, then the sitting Speaker of the House become Acting President until either the House should select a President or the Senate should select a Vice President. Electoral Collage Electoral College map showing the results of the 2008 US presidential election. Elections 2016 • https://ballotpedia.org • Over 15.000 candidates for over 5.000 offices Electoral Collage - Controversy • The elections of 1876, 1888 and 2000 produced an Electoral College winner who did not receive the plurality of the nationwide popular vote • in 2000 – Bush: 271 electoral votes, Gore: 266 EV. Popular election – Bush: 50,456,002 (47.87%), Gore: 50,999,897 (48.38%) • weight of individual votes not equal • promotes interests of smaller states (yet highlights the federal character of the nation) • Presidential campaigns may focus on large swing states (it's enough to win 11 big states to win the election) • Electoral Collage system promotes big turnouts in swing states and discourages turnouts in non-swing states POTUS Powers of the President of the USA ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Head of State Head of Government Top executive officer Commander-in-chief Grants pardons Sings legislation Vetoes legislation Directs foreign policy Appoints many federal officers (ambassadors, member of Cabinet) Nominates Supreme Court judges, federal judges History of POTUS as an anecdote? ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● The First President The Second President The first president to die in office The first assassinated president In fact, all who were assassinated The first impeached president The first unmarried president The first Catholic president The first president to resign The first non-white president A selection of defining moments ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● George Washington Thomas Jefferson vs Aaron Burr James Monroe Andrew Jackson Abraham Lincoln Andrew Johnson Theodore Roosevelt Woodrow Wilson Franklin Delano Roosevelt John Fitzgerald Kennedy Richard Nixon Ronald Reagan George W. Bush Jr Barack Obama Tasks ● ● Find and be able to discuss an important historical speech which helped define the positon of the President of the United States in contemporary American society and political system. Be sure to be able to analyse the rhetorical devices which made the speech so effective. Study what other people had to say about the speech you chose. For the next meeting ● ● Study the structure, history, powers and authorities of US Congress I need the name of the sutdent to prepare a presentation about one selected controversy i nthe long Congressional history