According to the Constitution...The President does not have any power to declare war. That power was given exclusively to the Congress. This was meant to keep the President in check.If that power was given to or allowed to be executed by the President, he would become a Dictator in due time, once he realized the power he had. He could declare a war, attack anyone he chose with his army, and take over the country/world.The President can ask Congress for a Declaration of War, but the Congress is supposed to vote on declaring that war or not.Unfortunately these days the whole process works backwards, only because "we the people" let it happen. The President attacks a country, then asks Congress to declare the war. He gives himself controlling powers that were not delegated to him by the Constitution.Sounds like the beginning of a dictatorship to me!
The vice president and the gov't.
The executive office of the president works most closely with the president of the United States. The executive office of the president is headed by the white house chief of staff and consists of the president as well as various support staff.
veto it or pass it. 2nd Answer: Good answer, but the president can also simply not veto or sign it, but let it just sit there. Here's how it works: The President has 10 days, not counting Sundays to sign or veto a bill. If (s)he does neither and Congress is in session, the bill then passes just as if (s)he signed it. If (s)he does neither, and Congress is out of session, even if the President already has the bill, then the bill fails. This is called a 'pocket veto'. (Put the bill in your pocket and forget about it.)
He can veto a bill and he can "pocket veto" one. A pocket veto is when he does nothing and it sits on his desk for 10 days. At that point it is a veto. This is handy because the law maybe popular but he doesn't want to veto it, so he does nothing either way. In the last several years a third way has been used and that is a signing statement. The President signs the bill into law, but then signs a statement that it shouldn't be enforced. Bush did this with about 800 laws. I don't know if Obama has done any signing statements. This really got going under Clinton who did several hundred in his 8 years.
lolololololo
Hoover
This all depends on the Congress and the President. If the president's party has the majority in Congress, he generally works with the majority leaders to get his agenda through Congress. If the president's party is the minority party in Congress, he uses two tools: obstructionism from the minority leadership (the filibuster, and loading up bills with things the majority hates in an attempt to get them tabled), and the veto.
More than a third of the population lives and works on farms.
to provide immediate employment in any type of government job
congress works for the people
WRONG - It works just like a battery maybe correct? - It is electrochemical.
The President nominates judges to the Supreme Court, and Congress ratifies those nominations. So while the President does choose some of the members of the judicial branch, that power is limited.
Everybody who works for the President in his Administration.The legislative is the second half of the US government, consisting of the Supreme Court and Congress.
Congress is made of two bodies of the legislative branch. They are the Senate and the House of Representatives. The Senate has two senators from each state and the House is based on the population of a state. Together they are called "Congress." Congress works and passes laws that are sent to the president for veto or signing.
the congress works in a building know as the
Actually the president can not create jobs except for a few who work at the White House. He can propose that Congress create public works programs that create government jobs. He can also propose that Congress pass laws that provide financial incentives to businesses that hire new people- these may or may not work. He could ask Congress to do what FDR did- draft a half-million men into the army.