Chapter 3 - 5/5 - Comparing the US and UK executive Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the State of the Union Address?

A

It is effectively nothing more than a wish list of what the president wants passed into law - whether it is or not depends entirely on Congress.

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2
Q

What is the UK equivalent of the State of the Union Address?

A

The Queen’s Speech at the start of every parliamentary session.

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3
Q

If the State of the Union Address is a ‘wish list’, what is the Queen’s Speech?

A

A ‘to do’ list, containing near certainties rather than requests.

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4
Q

What happens when the president submits a budget to Congress?

A

It is the start of many months of bargaining in which the president will likely be defeated on may items.

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5
Q

What happens when the UK government submits its budget?

A

The budget that is submitted is the budget that will pass.

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6
Q

What is the difference between the president’s and the prime minister’s appointing powers to the executive?

A

The prime minister does not require anyone to confirm their appointments whereas the Senate must confirm the president’s nominations.

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7
Q

What can the president do that the prime minister cannot?

A
  • Veto legislation.
  • Appoint federal judges - this was handed over to the JAC in 2006 in the UK.
  • Pardon people - the Queen retains this power in the UK.
  • The president is head of state and head of government.
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8
Q

What is the president’s continuation in office not dependent on?

A

Their support in Congress, unlike in the UK where Parliament can remove a prime minister it has lost the confidence of.

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9
Q

What ‘sticks and carrots’ does the president lack?

A

The stick of party discipline is wholly ineffective; the carrot of appointments to the administration is unwanted.

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10
Q

Why is there no equivalent of PMQs in the US?

A

The separation of powers means the president cannot enter Congress.

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11
Q

Where does all executive power reside?

A

With the president, the cabinet has none.

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12
Q

How does the president’s cabinet function?

A

As an advice-giving body because it has no power of its own.

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13
Q

What is the difference between cabinet members in the US and the UK?

A

Cabinet members in the US are barred from serving in the legislature due to the separation of powers; in the UK you cannot be part of the cabinet without first being part of the legislature.

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14
Q

How does the hierarchy of cabinet work in the US and UK?

A

In the US every cabinet member is subordinate to the president, and he is simply first; in the UK the cabinet is a collective decision-making body, with the prime minister as first among equals.

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15
Q

Who approves the cabinet appointments of the prime minister?

A

No one

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16
Q

Why do most prime ministers keep their rival in the cabinet?

A

To ensure their loyalty.

17
Q

What phrase did Lord Hailsham coin?

A

‘the elective dictatorship’

18
Q

When did Lord Hailsham coin his phrase for the increase of executive power?

A

1976

19
Q

What policy area do presidents tend to dominate?

A

Foreign policy

20
Q

What area of policy have presidents struggled to dominate?

A

Domestic policy