The Presidency - Overview
Domestic Powers
4th Branch
Foreign Policy
Diplomacy
100

What are the 3 qualifications to be President of the United States?

the president must be a natural-born citizen of the United States, be at least 35 years old, and have been a resident of the United States for 14 years.

100

What is the term for issuing federal directives in the United States, used by the President of the United States, that manages operations of the federal government. 

Executive Order

100

Government offices/departments that handle the “everyday” work of the government

Bureau or Bureaucracy 

100

Some aspects of foreign policy remains unchanged for the United States. Resisting the ambitions of the Soviet Union (maintaining a democracy) and freedom of... what....?

Freedom of the Seas

100

Ranked first among the members of the President's cabinet.

Secretary of State

200

What Constitutional Amendment limits the number of terms for a President?

22nd Amendment 

200

DOUBLE JEOPARDY:

What two political theories have been used to define the Presidents growth of power from the founding fathers to present day?

Whig Theory and Stewardship Theory

200

Name TWO bureaus with their full name and abbreviation AND describe what they do.

Answers Vary

200

term: a purposeful refusal to become generally involved in the affairs of the rest of the world.

isolationism 

200

Term: The right to send and receive diplomatic representatives.

Right of Legation

300

If a President dies, resigns, or is impeached, what 1947 act establishes who takes over?

Presidential Succession Act of 1947

300

What is the power the President has that grants reprieve and pardons.

Power of Clemency

300

Name 3 main jobs of the Federal Bureaucracy.

Carry out Laws, Provide Services, Issue rules and Regulations.

300

DOUBLE JEOPARDY:

a foreign policy of the United States, proclaimed in 1823 that said that European powers do not belong in The Americas, or in the western hemisphere in general.

The Monroe Doctrine 

300

Ambassadors are not subject to the laws of the state to which they are accredited is called?

Diplomatic Immunity 

400

What is the term called where the President chooses their Vice President to strengthen his or her chance of being elected by virtue of certain ideological, geographic, racial, ethnic, gender, or other characteristics. 

"Balancing the Ticket"

400

An indirect veto of a legislative bill by the president by retaining the bill unsigned until it is too late for it to be dealt with during the legislative session.


Pocket Veto

400

What are the 4 classifications of bureaucratic agencies?

Cabinet Departments

Government Corporations 

Regulatory Agencies

Independent Agencies

400

Following World War II, the United States and most of the rest of the war-weary world looked to what principle that means to keep international peace and order.

Collective Security 

400

What is NATO and why was it made?

North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The alliance was formed initially to promote the collective defense  of Western Europe, particularly against the threat of Soviet aggression.

500

What are the 9 roles that a President takes on when assuming the office?

Chief of State, Chief Executive, Chief Administrator , Chief Diplomat, Chief Legislator, Commander in Chief, Chief Economist, Chief of Party, Chief Citizen


500

What are the four roles that a First Lady plays during a President's term?

Campaigner, Hostess, Policy Advocate, Public Face

500

What award is given as a tongue-in-cheek award to public officials in the United States for their squandering of public money. 

Golden Fleece Awards

500

What foreign policy did the United States follow from mid-1947 to the 1980s that was rooted in the belief that if communism could be kept within its existing boundaries, it would collapse under the weight of its own internal weaknesses.  

Containment (Truman Doctrine)

500

What are the 4 goals of the State Department?

  • Protect the United States and Americans;

  • Advance democracy, human rights, and other global interests;

  • Promote international understanding of American values and policies; and

  • Support U.S. diplomats, government officials, and all other personnel at home and abroad who make these goals a reality

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