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President's and ability
Under the U. S. presidential system, the support of the Congress for the President's appropriations requests is not necessary for the separately elected President to remain in office, but can severely limit the President's ability to govern effectively.
" The following items from the successive issues of the annual MIT President's Report trace the growth and visibility of the Department under Slater's leadership, before World War II, and the ability of the Department to contribute to defence during the war.
However, by his departure his significance in the plot had decreased as the show started to focus more on the President's ability to govern despite obstacles such the season two multiple sclerosis scandal and the second Bartlet for America campaign in seasons three and four, and increased focus on foreign policy and terrorism in these seasons.
It is known that he was an opponent of a sitting President's ability to seek a third term in office.
Clinton's defense counsel argued that Clinton's grand jury testimony had too many inconsistencies to be a clear case of perjury, that the investigation and impeachment had been tainted by partisan political bias, that the President's approval rating of more than 70 percent indicated that his ability to govern had not been impaired by the scandal, and that the Managers had ultimately presented " an unsubstantiated, circumstantial case that does not meet the constitutional standard to remove the President from office.
The U. S. President's control over drug policy ultimately rests in his ability to appoint and dismiss the Secretary.
More importantly, Jackson also questioned the Court's ability to review the President's actions.
Although it would seem that his draft opinion is at odds with his later views of the President's war powers, specifically in Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer in which he interpreted Congress's ability to restrict the President's powers rather generously, there are substantive differences between the two cases.
" This was based in the then newly added but undefined and untested wording stipulating the Vice President's ability to exercise classification authority rested “ in the performance of executive duties ,”.
The Insurrection Act of 1807 is the set of laws that govern the US President's ability to deploy troops within the United States to put down lawlessness, insurrection and rebellion.
333 of the " Insurrection Act ," and widened the President's ability to deploy troops within the United States to enforce the laws.

President's and suspend
It has also been asserted that the President's responsibility in the " faithful " execution of the laws entitles him to suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus.
Despite his long-time loyalty to Palmer, Novick strongly opposed the President's decision to suspend the attacks based on only the faintest of evidence that the recordings were false.

President's and Congress
Congress passed a third Reconstruction Act to invalidate these opinions, and took two votes to defeat the President's obstruction.
Main supporters of the approval include the President's PLN, which has established a coalition with PUSC and ML in Congress to approve the implementation laws in Congress, as well as different business chambers, while the main opposition to CAFTA comes from PAC, labor unions, environmental organizations and public universities.
Roger Porter, another architect of the program, acknowledges that the program was weakened by the many hands that changed the President's calculus, such as Congress.
Although the Constitutional text seems to suggest to the contrary, the Senate's practice has been to elect a full-time President pro tempore at the beginning of each Congress, as opposed to making it a temporary office only existing during the Vice President's absence.
Congress has often explicitly limited the President's power to remove ; during the Reconstruction Era, Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act, purportedly preventing Andrew Johnson from removing, without the advice and consent of the Senate, anyone appointed with the advice and consent of the Senate.
In Myers v. United States,, the Supreme Court held that Congress could not limit the President's power to remove an executive officer ( the Postmaster General ), but in Humphrey's Executor v. United States, it upheld Congress's authority to restrict the President's power to remove officers of the Federal Trade Commission, an " administrative body cannot in any proper sense be characterized as an arm or eye of the executive.
The President's assessment of the State of the Union must be publicized to Congress, and thus to the nation.
For many years, the speech was referred to as " the President's Annual Message to Congress ".
When Congress investigated the scope of the President's legal powers, it belatedly found that the United States had been declared by presidential administrations to be in a continuous open-ended state of emergency since 1950.
The Social Security Act was drafted during Roosevelt's first term by the President's Committee on Economic Security, under Frances Perkins, and passed by Congress as part of the New Deal.
If the Congress overrides the veto by a two-thirds majority in each house, it becomes law without the President's signature.
Because the legislation that is the subject of the President's request ( or " Special Message ", in the language of the bill ) was already enacted and signed into law, the vote by the Congress would be ordinary legislative action, not any kind of veto — whether line-item, legislative or any other sort.
The Congress first overrode a presidential veto ( passed a bill into law notwithstanding the President's objections ) on 3 March 1845.
Justice Samuel F. Miller dissented, but only because he believed the respondent was not entitled to the property under the acts passed by Congress and the President's pardons.
The approval of both chambers is required to pass any legislation, which then may only become law by being signed by the President ( or, if the President vetoes the bill, both houses of Congress then re-pass the bill, but by a two-thirds majority of each chamber, in which case the bill becomes law without the President's signature ).
1541-1548 ) is a federal law intended to check the President's power to commit the United States to an armed conflict without the consent of Congress.
Because the Constitution limits the President's authority in the use of force without a declaration of war by Congress, there is controversy as to whether the provisions of the resolution are consistent with the Constitution.
* Negotiate with Congress, other members of the executive branch, and extragovernmental political groups to implement the President's agenda
" Constitutional disability " in this context could describe either the potential President's failure to meet the eligibility requirements of the office or his not having completed his electoral affirmation by Congress.

President's and central
In 1959 the central government intervened to impose President's Rule in Kerala, toppling the E. M. S.
and supports Rao's stand that legally and constitutionally, the central government could not impose President's Rule in the state of Uttar Pradesh in December 1992.
The first target of the Cylon fighter horde is the flagship Atlantia, the President's ship, and the central command base for the fleet.
President's rule ( or central rule ) is a term used in India when a state is placed under direct federal rule.
President's rule is enabled by Article 356 of the Constitution of India, which gives authority to impose central rule if there has been failure of the constitutional machinery in any state of India.

President's and issue
Appointed a member of the President's Council on Bioethics in 2001 and fired in February 2004, reportedly for her public disagreements and political differences with Council chair Leon Kass and the Bush Administration, particularly on the issue of therapeutic cloning.
It must be assumed the majority of the village board supported their President's position and convinced him to withdraw his resignation, but the issue would be sensitive to some for many years to come.
The President's veto was upheld by the people and the government now needs to find a way to solve this issue.
The Reserve Bank of India ( Amendment ) Act 1959, providing the issue of special notes of the Reserve Bank and the Government of India ( one rupee notes ), which are intended for circulation in certain territories outside India, was passed by the Lok Sabha on April 29, 1959 and the Rajya Sabha on April 30 and received the President's assent on May 1, 1959.
Judge Pine indicated, however, that he was interested in the fundamental issue of Presidential power ; even so, the steel companies ' attorneys continued to steer the discussion back to the equities and the President's statutory power under the Taft-Hartley Act.
Jackson's opinion took a similarly flexible approach to the issue, eschewing any fixed boundaries between Congress ' and the President's power.

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