Chapter 13 Review Sheet

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    Chapter 13 Review Sheet

    Head of State: the president as the ceremonial head of the government of the U.S., the symbol of all

    the people of the nation

    Head of Government: the role as director, of the Federal Government, heading one of the largest

    governmental machines the world has known term for the President as head of administration of

    the Federal Government (yeah I have no idea what this is. but im gonna assume chiefadministrator?)

    Chief Executive: term for the president as vested with the executive power of the U.S>

    Chief Diplomat: term for the president as the main architect of foreign policy and spokesperson to

    other countries

    Commander in Chief: term for the president as commander of the nations armed forces

    Chief Legislator: term for the president as architect of public policy and the one who sets the agenda

    for Congress

    Chief of Party: term for the president as the leader of his or her political party

    Chief Scapegoat: (I couldnt find this one)

    Watergate: scandal that turned out to be President Nixons downfall (the manner in which he filled

    the roles of party leader and chief citizen destroyed his presidency so he had to leave in disgrace or

    be impeached)

    had people sneak into the Watergate Building and steal information about theDemocratic National(??) Convention

    Citizen: a member of a state or nation who owes allegiance to it by birth or naturalization and is

    entitled to full civil rights

    Oath of Office: oath taken by the President on the day he takes office, pledging to faithfully execute

    the office and preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution

    Term of Office: the term that the President serves in office (4 years=1 term, can serve a max of 2

    terms after the 22nd

    Amendment)

    22nd

    Amendment: States that the president can only be elected to office twice, also if someone

    served in place of the president for two years of more, they also can only be elected once more

    (thats what I read but then I read something else that contradicted it so you might want to double

    check)

    Air Force One: One of the benefits of the President, his own personal planePresidential Succession: scheme by which a presidential vacancy is filled

    Balanced Ticket: when a presidential candidate chooses a running mate who can strengthen his

    chance of being elected by virtue of certain ideological, geographic, racial, ethnic, gender, or other

    characteristics

    25th

    Amendment:

    Section 1- VP will be become President if it becomes vacant

    Section 2- If the office of VP becomes empty, the President will nominate a VP who will take the

    office upon confirmation by a majority vote of both Houses of Congress

    Section 3: Procedure that takes place if the President is so incapacitated that he cannot perform the

    powers and duties of his office

    Section 4- how a President will be determined incapacitated

    Bush v. Gore: 2000 case when the Supreme Court finds vote recount in Florida unconstitutional, and

    so effectively decides the presidential election in Bushs favor

    Electoral Votes: votes cast by electors in the Electoral College

    Electoral College: group of persons chosen in each State and the District of Columbia every four

    years who make a formal selection of the President and Vice President

    Presidential Primary: an election in which a partys voters

    (1) Choose State party organizations delegates to their partys national convention and/or(2) Express a preference for their partys presidential nomination

    Presidential Caucus: In States with caucuses, voters in local meetings choose delegates to

    conventions at the congressional delegates to conventions at the congressional district or State

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    levels- where national convention delegates are picked

    Winner-takes-all: an almost obsolete system whereby a presidential aspirant who won the

    preference vote in a primary automatically won all the delegates chosen in the primary

    Proportional Representation: rule applied in Democratic primaries whereby any candidate who wins

    at least 15 percent of the votes gets the number of State Democratic convention delegates based on

    his or her share of that primary voteNational Convention: meeting at which a partys delegates vote to pick their presidential and vice-

    presidential candidates

    Platform: a political partys formal statement of basic principles stands on major issues, and

    objectives

    Delegate: (couldnt really find a clear def for this one)

    Keynote Address: speech given at a party convention to set the tone for the convention and the

    campaign to come

    Inauguration: candidate receiving majority of electoral votes is sworn in as President of the United

    States

    Questions:

    1.

    The President is expected simultaneously be:(a) Chief of state(b) Chief executive(c) Chief administrator(d) Chief diplomat(e) Commander in chief(f) Chief legislator(g) Party chief(h) Chief citizen

    2. Formal Qualification:(a) A natural born citizen of the U.S>(b) Be at least 35 yrs old(c) Have lived in the U.S. for at least 14 years

    3. Framers debated between a 4-year term with reelection vs. a single 6/7 year term and agreed ona four year term. Although there wasnt a limit on the number of terms a President could serve

    until 1951, after George Washington refused to seek two terms, that became the unwritten no -

    third-term tradition. FDR broke that tradition by seeking and winning a 3rd

    term in 1940 and a

    fourth in 1944. To prevent this from happening again, the 22nd

    amendment was adopted in 1951.

    No president can serve for more than 10 years.

    4. Originally, the Constitution did not provide for the succession of the VP but then the PresidentialSuccession Act of 197 was implemented.

    5. The Constitution only assigns it two formal duties:(1) To preside over the Senate(2) To help decide the question of presidential disability(3) Also names VP as President-in-waiting

    Throughout much of its history was treated as a joke; however, the position is important because

    they are only a heartbeat away from the presidency They have a low status because of the two

    major parties and the way they choose their candidates for the office. Traditionally, each national

    convention names the hand-picked choice of its presidential candidate. However, the presidential

    candidate picks the VP to balance the ticket that will increase his own chance of winning. However,

    with VP Dick Cheney, the power of the VP seemed to increase but there still has now been a

    President truly willing to make the VP an Assistant President b/c the VP is the only one (in

    addition to the POTUS official family) who is not subject to the ultimate discipline of removal from

    office by the President (can never be fired by the President)

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    6. In the election of 1800 it was Adams and Hamiliton (Federalists) vs. Jefferson and Burr(Democratic-Republicans). Each party nominated presidential electors in the several States with

    the clear understanding that they would vote for their partys candidates. Each of the 73 Demo-

    Rep voted for their party however they produced a tie for the presidency (each elector got 2

    votes each cast for a diff person but each for someone as President) so the HOR had to take 36

    separate ballots although the popular vote clearly chose Jefferson. This led to three changes:(1) Party nominations for the presidency and vice presidency(2) The nomination of candidates for presidential electors pledged to vote for their partys

    presidential ticket

    (3) The automatic casting of the electoral votes in line those pledges7. 1st method the parties developed to nominate presidential candidates= congressional caucus

    (used in 1800-1824 elections), downfall closed, nonrepresentative character of the system in

    mid-1820s election of 1832: national convention which consists of

    (a) Convention arrangements(b) Apportionment of delegates(c) Selection of delegates(more details ch 13 section 4)

    8.

    There are three major defects:(1) Winner of the popular vote is not guaranteed the presidency(2) Electors are not required to vote in accord with the popular vote(3) Any election might have to be decided in the HOR (House of Representatives)

    9. Proposed Reforms:(a) The district plan: electors would be chosen in each State in the same way as member of

    Congress

    (b) Proportional plan: each presidential candidate would receive the same share of a Stateselectoral vote as s/he received in the States popular vote

    (c) DirectPopular vote(d) National bonus plan (recent): would keep a lot of the electoral college system intact but

    would weigh the winner-take-all feature in favor of the winner of the popular vote a

    national pool of 102 electoral votes would be given automatically to the winner of the

    national popular vote.