Executive and Interbranch Relationships Flashcards
General Pres. Powers
i. Has the power to enforce the law, not to make it or break it
1. The power to enforce is greatest when authorized by statute
ii. Generally, the President’s powers are subject to control by statute.
Pardon, Veto, Appointment and Removal
Veto
- The President has 10 days to veto legislation. He can veto for any reason or no reason, but cannot veto specific items in the legislation and accept others. Overriding a veto requires a 2/3 majority vote of each house.
Pardon
The President can pardon or commute punishment for all fed. offenses. (Governors have a similar power for state crimes.) This power can’t be limited by Congress.
Appointment and Removal of Executive Officers
- Only the President (or his appointees) can hire or fire executive officers. Some senior officers (cabinet officers, ambassadors, Fed. judges) require the advice and consent of the Senate. The Senate has a power of rejection. The Senate’s approval power does not translate into a power of appointment.
a. executive officers= Anyone who takes action on behalf of the U.S.
b. Just as Congress cannot hire or fire an executive officer, it cannot give executive power to anyone it can hire or fire.
Foreign Affairs
i. Commander in Chief: The President has control over military decisions, although Congress has exclusive power to declare war
ii. Treaties and Executive Agreements
Treaty
- are negotiated by the President, but require approval by a 2/3 vote of the Senate. Once a treaty is ratified (approved), it has the same authority as a statute.
Executive Agreement
are presidential negotiations not submitted for approval by the Senate. They can be authorized, precluded, or overridden by statute, but they take precedence over conflicting state laws. They do not have the binding status of a treaty.
Impeachment
- : Applies to executive officers
a. An accusation of high crimes or misdemeanors requiring a majority vote of the House of Representatives.
b. Trial in the Senate
c. Conviction requires a two-thirds vote of the Senate.
d. The remedy is removal from office. No other penalty applies.
Impoundment
a. If statute gives the Pres. discretion to spend or withhold funds, he may do so.
b. But, when a statute unambiguously requires that funds be spent, the President cannot refuse to do so. There is no power to impound funds.
Legislative Veto
a. Happens when Congress passes a law reserving to itself the right to disapprove future executive actions by simple resolution
b. If Congress wants to override future executive actions, it must change the law so that the President has an opportunity to veto the new legislation).
c. Congress cannot evade the President’s guaranteed veto opportunity by passing a law saying that in the future it plans to govern by resolution.
Legislative delegation
- Congress can delegate its power to administrative agencies, so long as there are intelligible standards governing the exercise of that delegated power.
- Not a demanding test – almost all delegations of legislative powers are upheld.
Presidential immunity
a. Has absolute immunity for official acts
b. Has no immunity for acts done prior to taking office
c. Has an executive privilege not to reveal confidential communications with presidential advisers, but that privilege can be outweighed by a specifically demonstrated need in a criminal prosecution (Nixon)
Judicial immunity
a. Judges have absolute immunity for all judicial acts, but may be liable for non-judicial activities.
Legislative Immunity
a. United States Senators and Representatives (not state legislators) are protected by the Speech and Debate Clause.
b. Senators and Congressmen and their aides cannot be prosecuted or punished in relation to their official acts.
c. The official acts of a Fed. legislator cannot be introduced into evidence.
Federal and State power
i. Even though Fed. powers are superior, most Fed. powers are concurrent with those of the states. (On most topics, both Congress and the states have regulatory powers. If there is a conflict, Congress wins.)
ii. Some powers are exclusively Fed.. They include the power over foreign relations and the power to coin money.