It might seem rather unusual to the casual observer to suggest that the president of the United States could be anything other than powerful at all times. He is the most powerful person in the world’s only economic power. Some of the powers of the Presidency listed in the constitution are as commander in chief, as chief executive, can negotiate treaties which are subject to advice and consent of the senate and can veto something that he thinks is unconstitutional. The President’s powers are balanced by the Congress. Congress votes on legislation and then sends it to the executive branch to put into effect. In other words, Congress grants delegated powers to the president. The Constitution is especially concise when it gets to the heart of the presidency: the powers and duties of the chief executive. It grants the president a limited number of expressed powers, or explicit grants of authority. Because the vagueness of the constitution and because the courts are being biased towards the presidential power, over time the president’s power has evolved into authorities much more powerful than the Framers would have ever imagined. I think that even the …show more content…
They are elected indirectly, via the Electoral College. The president has three kinds of powers: expressed in the Constitution, delegated by Congress, and inherent in the role of chief executive. In theory, Congress passes laws and the president executes them. In reality, presidents constantly negotiate the limits of their power, which often expands during crises. The strength or weakness of a president cannot be determined by the outcome of an action alone, but by his personal influence on the outcome. The formal power of the president is partly set out in the constitution, and partly defined by custom. The constitution defines the president as the head of the executive branch of government, with a number of different powers arising from that