The Constitution and Succession

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The Constitution and Succession • Presidential succession is the process by which the presidency is filled if the President dies, resigns, or is removed as a result of impeachment. • The Vice President replaces the President, if he gives up the presidency. • Originally the Constitution only stated that the powers of the President would be transferred to the Vice President. • John Tyler became the first Vice President to become President when President William Henry Harrison died in office.

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The Constitution and Succession. Presidential succession is the process by which the presidency is filled if the President dies, resigns, or is removed as a result of impeachment. The Vice President replaces the President, if he gives up the presidency. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Constitution and Succession

Page 1: The Constitution and Succession

The Constitution and Succession• Presidential succession is the process by which the

presidency is filled if the President dies, resigns, or is removed as a result of impeachment.

• The Vice President replaces the President, if he gives up the presidency.

• Originally the Constitution only stated that the powers of the President would be transferred to the Vice President.

• John Tyler became the first Vice President to become President when President William Henry Harrison died in office.

Page 2: The Constitution and Succession

The Presidential Succession Act of 1947

• The Presidential Succession Act of 1947 fixed the order of succession following the Vice President.

• By its terms the Speaker of the House is next in line, followed by the President Pro Tem of the Senate who is followed by the Secretary of State and all the Cabinet officials in the order their cabinet positions were created by Congress.

• The most recently created cabinet position is the last in the line of succession.

Page 3: The Constitution and Succession

Presidential Succession1. Vice President2. Speaker of the House3. President Pro Tempore of the Senate4. Secretary of State5. Secretary of the Treasury6. Secretary of Defense7. Attorney General8. Secretary of the Interior9. Secretary of Agriculture10. Secretary of Commerce11. Secretary of Labor12. Secretary of Health and Human Services13. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development14. Secretary of Transportation15. Secretary of Energy16. Secretary of Education17. Secretary of Veteran's Affairs18. Secretary of Homeland Security

Order of Presidential Succession

Page 4: The Constitution and Succession

Presidential Disability• Neither the Constitution itself or Congress had any provisions

for Presidential disability.• President Eisenhower was disabled 3 times during his

presidency in the 1950s.• James Garfield lingered for 80 days before dying from an

assassin's bullet.• Woodrow Wilson suffered a stroke that left him incapacitated

for the remainder of his second term.• The Twenty-Fifth Amendment in 1967 settled the issue.• It stated that the Vice President is to become the acting

President if the President informs Congress in writing that he cannot perform his duties or the Vice President and a majority in the cabinet inform the Congress in writing that the President cannot perform his duties.

Page 5: The Constitution and Succession

Presidential Disability

• The President may then resume his powers when he informs Congress that he is no longer incapacitated.

• This may be challenged by the Vice President and a majority of the cabinet—in this case Congress has 21 days to act on the issue.

• Ronald Reagan was incapacitated briefly due to surgery in 1985.

Page 6: The Constitution and Succession

The Vice Presidency• The Constitution does not pay much attention to the office of the Vice

Presidency.• It gives the Vice President two duties—Preside over the Senate and help

decide the question of presidential disability.• John Adams, our first vice president, held the vice presidency was “the

most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived or his imagination conceived.”

• The office is an important one, because the Vice President is a “heartbeat” away from the presidency.

• Eight presidents have died in office and one (Richard Nixon) was forced to resign as a result of Watergate.

• The presidential candidate tries to pick a vice president who will “balance the ticket”—increase the chances of being elected due to geographic, racial, gender, ethnic, or other characteristics.

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Successor Reason for Succession

John Tyler William Henry Harrison's death in 1841

Millard Filmore Death of Zachary Taylor in 1850

Andrew Johnson Assasination of Abraham Lincoln in 1865

Chester A. Arthur Assasination of James A Garfield in 1881

Theodore Roosevelt Assassination of William McKinley in 1901

Calvin Coolidge Death of Warren G. Harding in 1923

Harry S. Truman Death of Franklin Roosevelt in 1945

Lyndon Johnson Assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963

Gerald Ford Resignation of Richard Nixon in 1974

Vice Presidents who have Succeeded to the Presidency

Page 8: The Constitution and Succession

Vice Presidential Succession• There have been 18 instances in which the office

of the Vice President has been vacant—9 times by succession to the presidency, 2 times by resignation, and 7 times by death.

• The 25th Amendment resolved the Succession Issue—Whenever there is a vacancy in the office of the Vice President, the President will appoint a replacement who must be approved by a majority vote by both houses of Congress.

• Richard Nixon in 1973 selected Gerald Ford who replaced Spiro Agnew who had resigned.

Page 9: The Constitution and Succession

The Vice Presidency Today• Today’s Vice President is Joe Biden.• Even today the President has been unwilling

to make the Vice President a true “assistant”—only the Vice President cannot under any circumstances be removed from office by the President—he cannot be fired by the President.