Presidential Powers 2: Crash Course Government and Politics #12 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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This episode of CrashCourse is brought to you by SquareSpace.
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Hello. My name's Craig, and this is CrashCourse Government and Politics, and today
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we're gonna really figure out why the President is the most powerful man in the world. Okay,
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not really, I guess, obviously, the reason he's the most powerful person in the world
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is he leads what's currently the most powerful nation in the world, and he can't really take
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credit for America's global position.
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Besides, there's a good case to be made that the richest man in the world is the most powerful,
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and if we're talking cultural influence, then who's more powerful than Kanye? According
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to Kanye, no one. But rather than go down the rabbit hole of power and the secret Cabal
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that actually runs the world, let's talk about the powers of the President that are not in
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the Constitution, at least, not literally.
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[Theme Music]
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So the Constitution lays out a specific limited number of expressed powers, but the President's
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able to do a lot more than what the Constitution says. Expressed powers are sometimes called
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'formal powers', but the President also has informal powers that do not appear within
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the written text of the Constitution. Sometimes the powers he has are implied by the wording
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of the Constitution, while sometimes, they're considered inherent in the office of the Presidency,
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which means that they flow logically from the ideas in the Constitution. A little confusing, right?
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Well, maybe the Thought Bubble can explain.
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Let's start easy with an expressed power, which is not the same as an espresso power,
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which is what I'm currently running on. The Constitution says right here in the text that
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the President is the commander in chief of the army and the navy. This also implies that
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he can and perhaps will lead the armed forces when the nation is at war. It also implies
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that he can command the Air Force, even though it only mentions the Army and Navy. So far,
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so good, but what about when the nation is not technically at war?
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Remember that the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war as a check on Presidential
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power, but the President still has the inherent power to use troops even when Congress hasn't
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actually formally declared war. Logically, if there's an immediate threat to the US and
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Congress doesn't have the time or the opportunity to declare war, the Commander in Chief must
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be able to use force. So this power is said to be inherent in the office. The problem
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is that once you grant that the President must have the power to use troops, how do
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you limit him? What sorts of threats are so immediate and dangerous that the President
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should have free reign to send troops? Other than Martian invasions or Taco Tuesday riots,
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obviously. If you look at most of the times America has sent troops into conflict, especially
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during the 20th and 21st centuries, it's been done with him acting as Commander-in-Chief
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without a formal declaration of war. We sent troops to Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, and
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twice to Iraq without Congress declaring war, and these are just the big ones. We're not even gonna
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talk about Grenada and Panama and all the other small interventions, so is there any check on this power?
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After Vietnam, Congress tried to put on the brakes by passing a War Powers Resolution,
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which requires the President to get authorization to use troops within 60 days of when he first
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commits them, or else he has to bring the troops back. This sounds like a pretty powerful
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check, but in practice, Congress always authorized the President to use force. Thanks, Thought Bubble.
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Sometimes I use force without being authorized.
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The President has informal powers in foreign policy, too. Formally, the Constitution says
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the President has the power to make treaties, receive foreign ambassadors, and appoint ambassadors
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and ministers. The President has developed the power to negotiate executive agreements,
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which are nowhere in the Constitution. Executive agreements are, well, they're agreements between
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the US and foreign nations that look like treaties but aren't formally treaties. They
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can come with treats, though. Brownies. Cookies. Trade concessions.
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The most important difference between an executive agreement and a treaty is that the agreements
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don't need to be ratified by 2/3rds of the Senate, but they become valid with only a
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majority of vote in both houses. This makes them easier to pass than a formal treaty and
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explains why Presidents prefer executive agreements to treaties.
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Lately, there have been some very important executive agreements, like the general agreement
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on tariffs and trade or GATT that has morphed into the WTO, and the North American Free
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Trade Agreement, better known as NAFTA, 'cause if it were a treaty, it'd be NAFTT, and that would be NAFTY.
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Although it isn't mentioned in the Constitution, the President is effectively the Chief Executive
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Officer or CEO of the US. Where does this power come from? Formally, it's in the faithfully
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executed clause in the Presidential Oath of Office, but more practically, it comes out
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of his power to appoint judges, ambassadors, and other ministers. Sorry, judges and ambassadors,
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but when it comes to executive power, it's the other ministers that matter here, because they're the
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cabinet secretaries and other heads of administrative agencies that make up the bulk of the government.
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The President chooses agency heads that agree with his policies- at least he hopes they
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do. So his appointments shape the political agenda. But more importantly, in appointing
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the ministers, the President assumes an inherent power to direct them and their agencies on
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how to implement laws. This makes since. As anyone who's ever worked for a boss knows,
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once you're hired you're sort of expected to know what your boss wants and to do it.
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This power to direct agencies and how to execute laws is enormous. It basically directs the way the government acts.
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The President has pretty limited formal powers over Congress. Other than convening special
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sessions, and the veto, and the State of the Union Address, maybe, he can't do all that
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much to influence them. I mean Congress usually meets without the President telling them to
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and he almost never vetoes bills. But that doesn't mean that the President doesn't have
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a big informal role to play in the legislative process.
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The President can attempt to set the legislative agenda by making recommendations for laws
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that he'd like to see passed. This is sometimes called the Legislative Initiative, and in
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practice it usually means that executive branch officials will actually draft the legislation
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they want and give it to Congress to refine into something they can pass. This is what
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happens with big agenda items like the Affordable Care Act. You may know it as ObamaCare. Or
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the Dodd-Frank Act, which, despite being named for its two Congressional sponsors was actually
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written with a lot of input from the White House.
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I should note here that even though it might look like the President is usurping legislative
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power, Congress often gives its power to the President willingly, because it wants to avoid
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responsibility for unpopular policies. He said it. I didn't say it. He said it. Also
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this is pretty limited power for the President because he can't force Congress to pass anything,
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even if he wrote it and says "Please, please, please, please, please." And because a President's
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ability to move the agenda decreases as his popularity decreases.
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There's another legislative power that the President has that is probably the most important one.
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He can give executive orders. These are presidential directives, or rules, that have
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the force of law. Executive orders can be overturned by actual Congressional lawmaking,
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or by Supreme Court decisions. These executive orders allow the President to circumvent the
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legislative process and act unilaterally. Ideally the President and Congress should
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work together, but c'mon! Sometimes the President decides to go it alone. 'Cause they're...
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they don't work together that often. These days anyway.
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Some really important policies have been made by executive orders, including desegregating
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the military and the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency. But executive orders may
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not be as durable as a law passed through the normal channels. If the next president
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in office disagrees with the order as a president put in place, he or she can get rid of them
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just as easily as his or her predecessor put them in place.
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The other informal power the President has is kind of obscure, but also pretty important.
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The President can impound the funds that Congress has appropriated for certain programs or projects
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if he doesn't want them implemented. More generally, under his power to execute the
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laws, he can order the bureaucracy to implement policies in a certain specific way. Or sometimes
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not at all. Although this can get him in to trouble
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There's one last inherent power I'll mention that the President currently has and that's
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executive privilege. There's probably more, but no president has asserted them yet. Basically
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this is the President's ability to keep information secret by claiming that it's too important
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to be revealed, usually for reasons of national security. There's a check on executive privilege
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though. It can be overturned by a court order as happened in the landmark Supreme Court
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case U.S. vs. Nixon. There they court ordered Nixon to turn over tapes of his conversations
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with aids that might have related to the Watergate Scandal.
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So even though the President isn't given a ton of power in the Constitution, the President
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is pretty powerful. This is especially true during war. Even if that war hasn't been declared.
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And this is a point you should remember. You should remember everything I say, but you
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should remember this too. Congress and the American people are usually willing to defer
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to the President on military matters and the inherent powers of the Commander in Chief are enormous.
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Often increased presidential power has been the result of a president seizing the initiative
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and expanding his own inherent or implied power. And once a president has established
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an implied power, the next president's very unlikely to do away with it. Oh, please, more
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power? No thank you. But just as often as presidents imply their own powers, Congress willingly hands
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over more power. And that's what we're going to talk about in the next episode. Thanks for watching.
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Crash Course Government and Politics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Support
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for Crash Course US Government comes from Voqal. Voqal supports non-profits that use
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technology and media to advance social equity. Learn more about their mission and initiatives
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at Voqual.org. Crash Course is made with the help of these commanders-in-chief. Thanks for watching.