President of the United States

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The presidential seal was first used in 1880 by President Rutherford B. Hayes and last modified in 1959 by adding the 50th star for Hawaii
The presidential seal was first used in 1880 by President Rutherford B. Hayes and last modified in 1959 by adding the 50th star for Hawaii

The President of the United States of America is the head of state and head of government of the United States. The office of president was established upon the ratification of the United States Constitution in 1788 and the first president took office in 1789.

The president serves as the chief executive and leader of the executive branch of the United States government. Article Two of the United States Constitution establishes the president as the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces and enumerates powers specifically granted to the president, including the power to sign into law bills passed by both houses of the Legislature, to create a Cabinet of advisors, to grant pardons or reprieves, and, with the "advice and consent" of the United States Senate, to make treaties and appoint federal officers, ambassadors, and federal judges (including Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States). Article Two also defines a presidential term at four years; subsequently, the Twelfth Amendment (1804) revised the procedure for electing the president and the Twenty-second Amendment (1951) established presidential term limits.

The United States was the first nation to create the office of president as the head of state in a modern Republic, and today the presidential system of government is used in many countries throughout the world. As of 2007, forty-two men have been President of the United States. George Washington was the first President of the United States, and George W. Bush is the 43rd and current president. From the early 20th century, the United States' status as a superpower has led the American president to be one of the world's best-known public figures.

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[edit] Origin

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The Treaty of Paris (1783) left the United States independent and at peace but with an unsettled governmental structure. The Second Continental Congress had drawn up Articles of Confederation in 1777, describing a permanent confederation but granting to the Congress—the only federal institution—little power to finance itself or to ensure that its resolutions were enforced. In part this reflected the anti-monarchy view of the Revolutionary period, and the new American system was explicitly designed to prevent the rise of an American tyrant to replace the British King.

However, during the economic depression that followed the Revolutionary War the viability of the American government was threatened by political unrest in several States, efforts by debtors to use popular government to erase their debts, and the apparent inability of the Continental Congress to redeem the public obligations incurred during the war. The Congress also appeared unable to become a forum for productive cooperation among the States encouraging commerce and economic development. In response a Constitutional Convention was convened, ostensibly to reform the Articles of Confederation but that subsequently began to draft a new system of government that would include greater executive power while retaining the checks and balances thought to be essential restraints on any imperial tendency in the office of the president.

Before the 1788 ratification of the Constitution, there was no comparable figure with executive authority. Individuals who presided over the Continental Congress during the Revolutionary period and under the Articles of Confederation had the title "President of the United States of America in Congress Assembled", often shortened to "President of the United States". They had no important executive power. The president's executive authority, tempered by the checks and balances of the Judicial and Legislative branches of the Federal Government, was designed to solve several political problems faced by the young nation and to anticipate future challenges, while still preventing the rise of an autocrat over a nation wary of royal authority.

[edit] General description

Article Two of the United States Constitution, coupled with several articles of amendment, establish the requirements one must meet in order to become president, as well as the term of office, method of election, and powers.

[edit] Requirements for holding office

The President must be a natural born citizen of the United States (or a citizen of the United States at the time the U.S. Constitution was adopted), at least 35 years of age, and a resident of the United States for at least fourteen years.

[edit] Term of office

President George W. Bush (second from left), walks with, from left, former Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Jimmy Carter during the dedication of the William J. Clinton Presidential Center and Park in Little Rock, Arkansas, November 18, 2004.
President George W. Bush (second from left), walks with, from left, former Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Jimmy Carter during the dedication of the William J. Clinton Presidential Center and Park in Little Rock, Arkansas, November 18, 2004.

The president and vice president serve a term of office of four years. The Twenty-second Amendment (which took effect in 1951) provides that no one may be elected to the office more than twice, and that no one may be elected president more than once who has held the office of (or acted as) president for more than two years of another's term. Prior to the ratification of this amendment, and following the precedent set by George Washington, an unofficial limit of two terms was generally observed, with the only exceptions being Theodore Roosevelt, who ran unsuccessfully for a third nonconsecutive term (although his first term was to finish the term of President William McKinley, who was assassinated—hence he was only elected once, for his second term), and Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was elected 4 times, served three full terms and died in his fourth after just over 12 years in office. Ulysses S. Grant also briefly sought a third nonconsecutive term, making an unsuccessful run for the Republican Party nomination in 1880. Since the amendment went into effect, three presidents have served two full terms: Dwight Eisenhower, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton. Richard Nixon was elected to a second term but resigned before completing it. Current President George W. Bush will become the fourth should he complete his current term, on January 20, 2009. Lyndon B. Johnson was the only president since the ratification of the amendment to have been eligible to have served more than 2 terms, having served only 14 months of John F. Kennedy's term after becoming president following the latter's assassination. Harry S. Truman himself was not subject to term limits, as the 22nd specifically states that it both did not apply to the current term of the president in office upon its ratification (Truman) or "to any person holding the office of president when this Article was proposed by the Congress" (Truman). He briefly allowed his name on the ballot for the 1952 election (but did not campaign), and officially withdrew after losing the New Hampshire primary.

[edit] Election

Presidents and vice presidents of the United States are elected every four years indirectly through the United States Electoral College. They are the only nationally-elected offices in the United States, since executive officers and judges are appointed, United States Senators are elected at the state level, and United States Representatives are elected at the district level.

On election day, the voting citizens select their preferred candidate, usually by voting for a slate of electors put forward by the candidate's party. The ballots for each voting citizen typically has the names of the candidates for president and vice president (running together on a ticket), and votes for those individuals translate at the state level into votes for the electors chosen from their respective parties. Although State Legislatures have the constitutional power to appoint slates of electors, all fifty states have established popular election of presidential electors. In December, following the general election, Electors gather at their respective State capitals to cast their ballots, which are then transmitted to Congress under the care of the sitting Vice President of the United States. Originally, under Article II, the electors cast two votes for the office of president, the individual with the most votes becoming president, the runner up becoming vice president. This changed with the 12th amendment, with each elector casting one vote for president and one vote for vice president. The ballots are counted and certified in January before both houses of Congress. Should a candidate for either president or vice president fail to achieve a majority of votes, the United States House of Representatives (voting by state) chooses the next president from among the candidates while the United States Senate (voting normally) selects the vice president

[edit] Campaign

The modern presidential campaign begins before the primary elections, which the two major political parties use to clear the field of candidates in advance of their national nominating conventions, where the most successful candidate is made the party's nominee for president. The party's presidential candidate chooses a vice presidential nominee and this choice is rubber-stamped by the convention. Also, the party establishes a platform on which to base its campaign. Although nominating conventions have a long history in the United States, their substantive importance in the political process has greatly diminished; however, they remain important as a way of energizing the parties for the general election and focusing the public's attention on the nominees.

Nominees participate in nationally televised debates, and while the debates are usually restricted to the Democratic and Republican nominees, third party candidates may be invited (such as Ross Perot in the 1992 debates). Nominees campaign across the country to explain their views, convince voters, and solicit contributions. Much of the modern electoral process is concerned with winning swing states through frequent visits and mass media advertising drives.

[edit] Salary

Presidential pay history
Date established Salary Salary in 2007
dollars
September 24, 1789 $25,000 $531,000 (1789)
March 3, 1873 $50,000 $811,000 (1873)
March 4, 1909 $75,000 $1,607,000 (1909)
January 19, 1949 $100,000 $820,000 (1949)
January 20, 1969 $200,000 $1,067,000 (1969)
January 20, 2001 $400,000 $441,000 (2001)

The First U.S. Congress voted to pay George Washington a salary of $25,000 a year (about $531,000 in 2005 terms) — a significant sum in 1789. Washington, already a wealthy man, refused to accept his salary. Theodore Roosevelt spent his entire $50,000 salary on entertaining guests at the White House. (Morris: The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt) Similarly, John F. Kennedy donated his salary to charities.[1]

Traditionally, the president is the highest-paid government employee. Consequently, the president's salary serves as a traditional cap for all other federal officials, such as the Chief Justice. A raise for 2001 was approved by Congress and President Bill Clinton in 1999 because other officials who receive annual cost-of-living increases had salaries approaching the president's. Consequently, to raise the salaries of the other federal employees, the president's salary had to be raised as well. The President's monetary compensation is minuscule in comparison to the CEOs of most Fortune 500 companies and comparable to that of certain kinds of professionals e.g. attorneys and physicians in some parts of the United States. Overall the vast majority of U.S. presidents were very affluent upon entering office and thus were not dependent on the salary.

Allowances for Former Presidents
GSA Allowance FY,2007 Carter Bush Clinton
Pension $188,000 $188,000 $188,000
Staff Salaries 96,000 96,000 96,000
Staff Benefits 2,000 63,000 64,000
Travel 2,000 55,000 64,000
Rental Payments 102,000 175,000 498,000
Telephone 10,000 16,000 77,000
Postage 15,000 13,000 15,000
Other Services 82,000 65,000 113,000
Printing 5,000 14,000 9,000
Supplies 5,000 15,000 16,000
Equipment 7,000 48,000 11,000
TOTAL $514,000 $748,000 $1,160,000

Prior to passage by Congress of the Former Presidents Act (FPA) in 1958, retired presidents did not receive a pension. All living presidents in 1959 began to receive a pension of $25,000 per year, an office, and a staff. The pension has increased numerous times with Congressional approval. Retired presidents now receive a pension based on the salary of the current administration's cabinet secretaries (Executive Level I), which is $183,500 as of 2007.[2]

The FPA, as amended, also provides former presidents with travel funds and mailing privileges. Secret Service protection for former presidents is also authorized by statute.

[edit] Privileges of office

Presidential authority, past and present: Air Force One flying over Mount Rushmore
Presidential authority, past and present: Air Force One flying over Mount Rushmore

The president is entitled to use the White House as his/her living and working quarters, and its entire staff and facilities, including medical care, kitchen, housekeeping and security staff. While traveling, the president is able to conduct the functions of the office from one of two custom-built Boeing 747 aircraft popularly known as "Air Force One."[3] The president also utilizes a United States Marine Corps helicopter, designated "Marine One" when the president is aboard. Similarly, "Navy One," "Army One," and "Coast Guard One" are the call signs used if the president is aboard a craft belonging to these services.[4] For ground travel, the president uses an armored presidential limousine, currently a heavily modified Cadillac DTS which uses the call sign "Cadillac One".

[edit] Secret Service

The sitting president and his/her family will be under constant protection by a United States Secret Service detail. Until 1997, all former presidents and their families were protected by the Secret Service until the president's death. The last president to have lifetime Secret Service protection is Bill Clinton; George W. Bush and all subsequent presidents will be protected by the Secret Service for a maximum of ten years after leaving office.[5] However, debates in Congress have been raised concerning this decision. Following the increase in terrorism and threats to the president in general since 1997, lifetime protection is being reconsidered.

[edit] Succession

Article II of the Constitution provides that the vice president takes the place of president if the office were to become vacant. More detail is prescribed in the 20th and 25th amendments, and other laws extend the line of succession further.

The only president to be elected neither to the office of president nor vice president was Gerald Ford who was appointed by Richard Nixon and confirmed after his vice president, Spiro Agnew, resigned in 1973. Nixon later resigned and Ford succeeded to the presidency. Ford was never subsequently elected.[6]

[edit] Resignation

By Act of Congress, the president may resign only if his written resignation is delivered to the Secretary of State.[7] The only president to resign was Richard Nixon, on August 9, 1974.

[edit] Office-holders

See also: President of the Continental Congress


[edit] President of the United States in Congress Assembled

[edit] President of the United States

*Note: Cleveland was elected twice nonconsecutively, changing the numbers of all presidents after him, starting with McKinley. Thus, George W. Bush is the 43rd president although he is the 42nd person to hold the office.

[edit] Life after the presidency

Former presidents are referred to as "Mr. President." Since 1994 presidents have been entitled to Secret Service protection for 10 years after finishing their terms of office (previously they were protected for life, which continues to be the case for presidents who served before 1997).[8] Since Harry S. Truman (1953), presidents have received a pension after leaving office, and since the presidency of Herbert Hoover (1933), former presidents have received a repository for preserving and making available their papers, records, and other historical materials (The National Archives does not provide the initial funding for a Presidential Library. The National Archives only runs the completed facility).

Notable examples of significant post-presidential careers include William Howard Taft's tenure as Chief Justice of the United States, Herbert Hoover's work on government reorganization after World War II, Jimmy Carter's career as a global human rights campaigner and best-selling writer, and most recently George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton's combined effort to appeal for donations from Americans after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Other former presidents have served in elected office after leaving the White House; Andrew Johnson was elected to the Senate after his term was over, and John Quincy Adams served in the House of Representatives. Grover Cleveland, whose bid for reelection failed in 1888, was elected president again four years later in 1892. John Tyler served in the provisional Confederate States Congress during the Civil War, and was elected to the official Confederate Congress but died before it convened.

[edit] Presidential statistics

See also: Category:United States presidential history and Category:Lists relating to the United States presidency

[edit] Births

[edit] Deaths

  • Since George Washington's death in the 1790s, presidents or former presidents have died in every decade except four: the 1800s, 1810s, 1950s, and 1980s. No president or former president has died in the month of May.

[edit] Deaths in office and assassination attempts

See also: List of United States Presidential assassination attempts
  1. Andrew Jackson (1835) by Richard Lawrence
  2. Former President Theodore Roosevelt (1912) by John Schrank
  3. President-elect Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1933) by Giuseppe Zangara
  4. Harry S. Truman (1950) by Griselio Torresola and Oscar Collazo
  5. Richard M. Nixon (1974) by Samuel Byck
  6. Gerald R. Ford (1975) by Lynette Fromme and Sara Jane Moore (two separate, independent attempts)
  7. James E. Carter(1979) by Raymond Lee Harvey
  8. Ronald W. Reagan (1981) by John Hinckley, Jr. (Main article: Reagan assassination attempt)
  9. George H. W. Bush (1993) by sixteen suspected terrorists, in the employ of Saddam Hussein's Iraq
  10. William J. Clinton (1994) by Francisco Duran
  11. George W. Bush (2005) by Vladimir Arutinian
  • "Curse of Tippecanoe" refers to the fact that between William Henry Harrison and John F. Kennedy, each president elected or re-elected in a year evenly divisible by twenty died in office: William Henry Harrison (1840), Abraham Lincoln (1860), James Garfield (1880), William McKinley (1900), Warren G. Harding (1920), Franklin D. Roosevelt (1940), John F. Kennedy (1960). Ronald Reagan (1980) survived an attempt on his life and George W. Bush (2000) had a Soviet grenade thrown at him while in the country of Georgia, which failed to explode.
  • John Tyler is considered by some to be the only president who died outside of the United States, as he died in 1862 in the State of Virginia, which at the time considered itself part of the Confederate States of America.

[edit] Longevity of former presidents

Former Presidents Bill Clinton, George H. W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, and Gerald Ford, and their wives, at the funeral of Richard Nixon on April 27, 1994
Former Presidents Bill Clinton, George H. W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, and Gerald Ford, and their wives, at the funeral of Richard Nixon on April 27, 1994

As many as five former presidents have been alive at three periods of American History:

  1. March 4, 1861January 18, 1862 (from the inauguration of Lincoln to the death of Tyler): Martin Van Buren, John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, and James Buchanan.
  2. January 20, 1993April 22, 1994 (from the inauguration of Clinton to the death of Nixon): Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush
  3. January 20, 2001June 5, 2004 (from the inauguration of George W. Bush to the death of Reagan): Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and Bill Clinton.

There have been six periods in American history during which no former presidents were alive:

  1. April 30, 1789March 4, 1797: There were no former presidents.
  2. December 14, 1799March 4, 1801: from the death of Washington to the end of John Adams's term.
  3. July 31, 1875March 4, 1877: from the death of Andrew Johnson to the end of Grant's term.
  4. June 24, 1908March 4, 1909: from the death of Cleveland until the end of Theodore Roosevelt's term.
  5. January 5, 1933March 4, 1933: from the death of Coolidge until the end of Hoover's term.
  6. January 22, 1973August 9, 1974: from the death of Lyndon Johnson until the resignation of Nixon.

Herbert Hoover lived the longest time as a former president at 31 years, 7 months and 16 days (11,553 days). James K. Polk had the shortest life as a former president, dying on June 15, 1849, three months (103 days) after his term ended (March 4, 1849).

As of April 2007, there are three living former presidents: Jimmy Carter, George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton. The most recently deceased president is Gerald Ford, who died December 26, 2006. George H.W. Bush is currently the oldest living U.S. president.

[edit] Elections

Four presidents[13] have been elected by a majority of the Electoral College without a plurality of popular votes:

  1. John Quincy Adams trailed Andrew Jackson by 44,804 votes in the 1824 election[14]
  2. Rutherford B. Hayes trailed Samuel J. Tilden by 264,292 votes in the 1876 election
  3. Benjamin Harrison trailed Grover Cleveland by 95,713 votes in the 1888 election
  4. George W. Bush trailed Al Gore by 543,895 votes in the 2000 election.
  • Eleven presidents have been elected with a plurality of popular votes, without a majority of popular votes:
  • Two presidents have been elected by the House of Representatives when no candidate achieved a majority of electoral votes:

Thomas Jefferson had the same number of electoral votes as Aaron Burr in the 1800 election, and John Quincy Adams trailed Andrew Jackson by 15 electoral votes in the 1824 election, but Jackson did not have a majority.

[edit] Unelected presidents

  • Nine presidents have taken office without being elected to the presidency. Of those nine, eight had been elected as vice presidents and then succeeded to the presidency.
    • Of the eight who were elected vice president, four did not run for the following presidency.
      • John Tyler—assumed the presidency on the death of William Henry Harrison; did not run in the 1844 election
      • Millard Fillmore—succeeded Zachary Taylor; did not run in the 1852 election
        • Fillmore did run for president in the 1856 election as a Know Nothing Party candidate and received 873,053 votes (21.6%), finishing third
      • Andrew Johnson—succeeded Abraham Lincoln; did not run in the 1868 election
      • Chester A. Arthur—succeeded James Garfield; did not run in the 1884 election
    • The other four later ran for president and were elected:
      • Theodore Roosevelt—succeeded William McKinley; elected president in the 1904 election
      • Calvin Coolidge—succeeded Warren G. Harding; elected president in the 1924 election
      • Harry S. Truman—succeeded Franklin D. Roosevelt; elected president in the 1948 election but did not run again in the 1952 election, despite being eligible for a second term.
      • Lyndon B. Johnson—succeeded John F. Kennedy; elected president in the 1964 election but did not run again in the 1968 election
    • One president, Gerald Ford, was never elected as either vice president or president; he was appointed vice president by Richard Nixon (with approval from Congress) upon the resignation of Vice President Spiro Agnew. He succeeded to the presidency after Nixon's resignation and was defeated in the 1976 election by Jimmy Carter.

[edit] Resignations and impeachments

Richard M. Nixon is the only president to have resigned. He did so because he faced possible impeachment, leaving office in 1974 (the House Judiciary committee reported favorably articles of impeachment to the House in his case). Two presidents have been impeached, although neither were convicted. Andrew Johnson was impeached in 1868, then tried and acquitted by one vote by the Senate (the vote was 35-19, 1 short of the 36-18 required). Bill Clinton was impeached in 1998, then tried and acquitted by the Senate the following year. No U.S. President has ever been removed from office.

[edit] Terms of office

  • There were four cases in which only one person served in a presidential term but that person did not serve for a full 1461 days.
    • Although the first presidential term was deemed to have started on March 4, 1789—the day that the United States Constitution became operational—the First Congress did not meet to count the electoral vote until April 6, and thus George Washington did not accede to the office until then, giving him 1427 days and some number of hours.
    • Franklin D. Roosevelt's first term began at noon EST March 4, 1933, but the twentieth amendment changed the start of the next term to Noon EST on January 20, 1937, giving Roosevelt a first term of 1419 days.
    • Because of the properties of the Gregorian calendar, 1800 and 1900 were not leap years, so John Adams' term and William McKinley's first term were shortened to 1460 days.
  • An urban legend claims that David Rice Atchison was the 11½th president of the United States for one day on March 4, 1849, in between the terms of James K. Polk (whose term expired at the first moment (noon EST) of March 4) and Zachary Taylor (who chose not to be sworn in until March 5 as March 4 was a Sunday). However, the logic of this is contradictory. If one does not consider Taylor to have officially become president until the administration of his Oath of Office, then the same logic precludes any person from having automatically succeeded before likewise having taken the same oath. In fact, Taylor, as president-elect, automatically acceded to the Office of President upon the expiration of Polk's term, even if he did not yet enter into the execution of that office until the oath was administered. This fact was confirmed by Congress when it certified his election, as it defined the beginning of the administration as the instant Polk left office. Even if supposing, for the sake of argument, the rather odd interpretation that only Presidents-elect are required to take the oath before officially occupying the office, while officials in the Presidential Line of Succession occupy the presidency ipso facto, then there would be a long list of dozens of additional "presidents" who only held the office for a matter of hours or minutes.
  • Grover Cleveland had two non-consecutive terms as president and is counted both as the 22nd and the 24th president. Consequently, all subsequent presidents who are referred to as "the nth President of the United States" are actually the (n − 1)th person to hold the office. So George W. Bush, the 43rd president, is actually the 42nd person to be president.

[edit] Other facts

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Leonard Leo, James Taranto, and William J. Bennett. Presidential Leadership: Rating the Best and the Worst in the White House. Simon and Schuster, June, 2004, hardcover, 304 pages, ISBN 0-7432-5433-3
  • Waldman, Michael, and George Stephanopoulos, My Fellow Americans: The Most Important Speeches of America's Presidents, from George Washington to George W. Bush. Sourcebooks Trade. September 2003. ISBN 1-4022-0027-7
  • Couch, Ernie, Presidential Trivia. Rutledge Hill Press. 1 March 1996. ISBN 1-55853-412-1
  • Lang, J. Stephen, The Complete Book of Presidential Trivia. Pelican Publishing. September 2001. ISBN 1-56554-877-
  • Presidential Studies Quarterly, published by Blackwell Synergy is a quarterly academic journal on the President.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Richard Reeves. President Kennedy: Profile of Power. (1993)
  2. ^ Former Presidents Act (FPA). U.S. Senate. U.S. Senate (1958). Retrieved on January 5, 2007.
  3. ^ Any U.S. Air Force aircraft carrying the president will use the call sign "Air Force One."
  4. ^ " Executive One" becomes the call sign of any civilian aircraft when the president boards.
  5. ^ 18 USC 3056
  6. ^ Morton, Bruce. "An honorable man", CNN, 2006-12-26. Retrieved on December 27, 2006.
  7. ^ Findlaw for legal professionals. Retrieved on January 24, 2007.
  8. ^ 18 USC 3056
  9. ^ Millard Fillmore was born January 7, 1800, the last year of the 18th century.
  10. ^ See:List of United States presidents by age at ascension to office and note Theodore Roosevelt was younger than Kennedy when he became president, but was not elected, succeeding after the assassination of McKinley.
  11. ^ [1] [2]
  12. ^ Taylor's body was exhumed in 1991 to test if he had died of arsenic poisoning. It was determined he did not.
  13. ^ A possible addition to this list is John F. Kennedy, who may have trailed Richard Nixon in the 1960 election. The precise gap in votes is difficult to determine because Alabama voters could only vote "Democratic" without choosing a candidate. Half of the state's electoral votes were pledged to Kennedy, and the other half went to Harry F. Byrd. It is impossible to know how many voters meant their "Democratic" vote to be for Kennedy or Byrd, and the margin between Kennedy and Nixon was smaller than the number of Democratic votes in Alabama. The official U.S. government figure counts all Alabama votes in Kennedy's total, giving Kennedy the plurality over Nixon.
  14. ^ However, in six of the then twenty-four states in 1824, the electors were chosen by the state legislature, with no popular vote.
  15. ^ Findlaw.com reposting of the constitution, Article II, Section I, Paragraph 8.
  16. ^ Franklin D. Roosevelt Library and Museum, [3]
  17. ^ Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and Museum, [4]

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[edit] Speeches

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