Executive Office of the President and the Cabinet Section 1 Chapter 8.
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Transcript of Executive Office of the President and the Cabinet Section 1 Chapter 8.
Focus Questions
How is the Executive Office of the President organized?
What is the role of the vice president
How does the cabinet help carry out the work of the executive branch?
Executive Office of the President
The Executive Office of the President is made up of the White House staff, the National Security Council, the Office of Management and Budget, the Council of economic Advisers, and the National Economic Council
The vice president has also taken a key role in helping the executive carry out work
Executive Office of the President
White House Staff
Not until the Civil War did Congress appropriate funds for the president to hire White House personal staff
This staff now is the presidents personal staff and close advisers
The White House chief of staff manages all White House staff and controls access to the president
Executive Office of the President
White House Staff
The people under the chief of staff are separated into area– national security issues, domestic policy, speechwriting, relations with Congress, press secretary
President Harding hired the first speech writer and that signaled the end of presidents writing their own speeches
Executive Office of the President
White House Staff
The scheduling and Advance Office plans presidential trips, which includes exact timings of arrivals, setting up motor cades, and even television cameras at the engagements
Executive Office of the President
National Security Council
The National Security Council was set up in 1947 (help coordinate departments that deal with national security)
The CIA and departments of defense had not worked much together and this would help
The National Security Advisor (appointed by the President) heads the NSC
The NSC is now part of the president’s staff
Executive Office of the President
Office of Management and Budget
The Office of Management and Budget is key tool for influencing agencies (budget requests come through this agency)
The OMB can withhold money from a program the president feels in ineffective
Executive Office of the President
Council of Economic Advisors
Council of Economic Advisors is set up to give expert economic advice to the president
They work with several other White House staff in advising the president
Executive Office of the President
National Economic Council
Bill Clinton formed this council in 1993
Their main goal is to coordinate economic policy in the same way the National Security Council advises on foreign policy
The Council monitors and advises the president on trade and industrial technology
Executive Office of the President
The Vice President
The Constitution states that the vice president presides over senate and is first in line for succession to the president
In the past vice presidents did not have many other duties
Recently presidents have given their vice presidents an active role in and responsibility for specific policy
The Cabinet
In addition to the Executive Office of the President, there are 15 cabinet departments
The heads of these departments are called secretaries
The Attorney General is an exception to that rule as he is the head of the Department of Justice
Cabinet departments are divided into units that perform the actual work of the government
Before the growth of the Executive Office of the President– the Cabinet was the president’s main advisory body
The Cabinet
Cabinet’s role is much less significant now
The attorney general and the secretaries of defense, state, and treasury are still frequently consulted
The Cabinet
Why do presidents rely so little on cabinet’s advise today? President’s rely more on
White House staff advice Cabinet meetings are
impractical and time consuming
Cabinet departments tend to be territorial (cabinet secretaries may offer advise that is beneficial to their specific areas of concern)