Betriebstechnik | Biographien | Biologie | Chemie | Deutsch | Digitaltechnik |
Electronica | Epochen | Fertigungstechnik | Gemeinschaftskunde | Geographie | Geschichte |
Informatik | Kultur | Kunst | Literatur | Management | Mathematik |
Medizin | Nachrichtentechnik | Philosophie | Physik | Politik | Projekt |
Psychologie | Recht | Sonstige | Sport | Technik | Wirtschaftskunde |
Ähnliche Berichte:
|
Projekte:
|
Papers in anderen sprachen:
|
geographie referate |
Government in the
General Principles:
The form of government is based on three main
principles: federalism, the separation of powers, and respect for the
Constitution with its seven articles and 26 amendments. Americans are subject
to two governments, that of their state and that of the
At each level, in state and
The Federal government also has three elements:
executive (the President), legislative (Congress) and judicial (Supreme Court)
branch, and the three elements are checked and balanced by one another. The
President is the effective head of the executive branch of government, head of
state and Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. The Cabinet is appointed by
the Presindent. Ist seat is the White House in
A constitutional amendment of 1967 made new arrangements for the succession, so that if a Vice-President in office dies or resigns the Senate elects a new one.
A person elected as Vice-President expects that he will have no defined function except to preside over the Senate (he has only a vote if the Senate vote is 50:50) unless he happens to be thrust into the highest office through the chance of the President's death. Most Vice-Presidents during a second term regard the office as a useful base from which to try to win their party's next candidature for the Presidency, as Nixon did in 1960, Humphrey in 1968, and Bush in 1988.
Out of the nineteen men elected to the Presidency between 1840 and 1960, four were assassinated (John F. Kennedy in 1963) and four died in office, so eight of the men elected as Vice-President before Ford acceded to the highest office - and in May 1945 Vice-President Truman became President only four months after the four-year period had begun.
Until 1951 there was no limit to the number of four-year terms for which a person could be elected as President. In 1940 Franklin Roosevelt was elected for a third term, and in 1944 for a fourth, cut short by his death. In 1951 a constitutional amendment set a limit of two terms - that is, eight years.
The Senate and the House of Representatives together form the Congress, which is the law-making body, and no federal taxes can be collected or money spent without the approval of both Houses. The President signs the laws. If he refuses, his veto can be overridden by a two-thirds majority in both Houses. Elections for both Houses are held in November each even-numbered year, when the whole House of Representatives is elected, to serve for only two years, while senators are elected in rotation for six years. If a senator or representative dies or resigns, a special election may be held to fill the vacant place for the remainder of the term.
The Senate embodies the federal nature of the Constitution, with two senators from each state. Each state's two senators are elected at separate elections, for example, one in November 1984 to serve for 1985-91, the other in 1986 to serve for 1987-93; and each senator is elected by and for a whole state.
The House of Representatives has a fixed number
of seats (435), and each state has one seat for every 1/435 share that it has
of the whole
The rules about fixed terms of office for
President and Congress have prevented the type of instability that has been
found at times in many European countries where the executive head of
government resigns if defeated in the parliamentary assembly. They have also
prevented the concentration of power that occurs in a parliamentary system
based on two strongly disciplined parties such as that of
The Federal Constitution:
It is a short document, and some of it is vague in meaning. Also, it was written 200 years ago, and the actual conditions and problems of an industrial nation are very different from those of the small pre-industrial society of the eighteenth century.
The First Article provides for the establishment of the legislative body, Congress, consisting of two Houses, and defines its powers. The second does the same for the executive, the President, and there is also provision in very general terms for a system of federal courts. The men of 1787 assumed that they were devising a constitution which would endure, but they also recognised that there might be a need for altering it, and they included provisions for amendment. The Fifth Article lays down the procedure for amendment, allowing either the states or Congress to take the initiative. A proposal to make a change must first be approved by two-thirds majorities in both Houses of Congress and then ratified by three quarters of the states.
The first ten amendments were made almost at once (1791); they form the 'Bill of Rights', and are really an extension of the original Constitution. Two more amendments were adopted in the next seventy years, and the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth were passed after the Civil War.
The Constitution of the
Article One (Section Eight) of the Constitution
gives the list of the topics about which the Congress has authority to make
laws. They include defence and foreign affairs, citizenship and naturalisation,
the regulation of commerce with foreign countries and among the states, and power
to collect taxes to pay the debts and to provide for the common defence and
general welfare of the
Parties and Elections:
Soon after the
Citizens aged eighteen or more may register as voters in their home towns, but about a quarter of all Americans do not bother to register, an so cannot vote. Both parties choose their candidates for most offices at public primary elections. In some states only people who have registered as Democrats may vote in Democratic primary elections, so too with Republicans. For the main offices the opposed candidates are normally Republicans and Democrats. Participation in elections is lower than in most other countries, around 60 percent at presidential elections, less than half in other ones. In most states people vote in referendums, on state and local questions at the same time as they vote for candidates for offices (for example the President).
Presidential elections: The President serves a four-year term and may stay in office for a
total of two full terms only. He or she must be an American citizen born in the
After the official nomination the election campaign begins in earnest continuing until Election Day, the Tuesday after the first Monday in November in leap years. Voters are registered and the party machinery drums up support, tries to win floating voters over etc.
On Election Day the electorate votes not for the presidential candidates themselves but for those presidential electors (members of the Electoral College) who have pledged to support a particular candidate.
The officially elected President, who is inaugurated and sworn in in January, is the candidate who has received the votes of the majority of the electors in the Electoral College.
The serious anomaly in the electoral college system is the rule that in each state the candidate who wins the biggest number of the people's votes receives the whole electoral college vote for the state, no matter how small the majority.
American Presidents:
George Washington (Fed.) 1789-1797 |
John Adams (Fed.) 1797-1801 |
Thomas Jefferson (Dem.) 1801-1809 |
James Madison (Dem.) 1809-1817 |
James Monroe (Dem.) 1817-1825 |
John Quincy Adams (Dem.) 1825-1829 |
Andrew Jackson (Dem.) 1829-1837 |
Martin van Buren (Dem.) 1837-1841 |
William Henry Harrison (Whig) 1841 |
John Tyler (Dem.) 1841-1845 |
James Polk (Dem.) 1845-1849 |
Zachary Taylor (Whig) 1849-1850 |
Millard Fillmore (Whig) 1850-1853 |
Franklin Pierce (Dem.) 1853-1857 |
James Buchanan (Dem.) 1857-1861 |
Abraham Lincoln (Rep.) 1861-1865 |
Andrew Johnson (Rep.) 1865-1869 |
Ulysses S. Grant (Rep.) 1869-1877 |
Rutherford Hayes (Rep.) 1877-1881 |
James Garfield (Rep.) 1881 |
|
Grover Cleveland (Dem.) 1885-1889 |
Benjamin Harrison (Rep.) 1889-1893 |
Grover Cleveland (Dem.) 1893-1897 |
William MacKinley (Rep.) 1897-1901 |
Theodore Roosevelt (Rep.) 1901-1909 |
William H. Taft (Rep.) 1909-1913 |
Woodrow Wilson (Dem.) 1913-1921 |
Warren G. Harding (Rep.) 1921-1923 |
Calvin Coolidge (Rep.) 1923-1929 |
Herbert Hoover (Rep.) 1929-1933 |
Franklin D. Roosevelt (Dem.) 1933-1945 |
Harry S. Truman (Dem.) 1945-1953 |
Dwight D. Eisenhower (Rep.) 1953-1961 |
John F. Kennedy (Dem.) 1961-1963 |
Lyndon B. Johnson (Dem.) 1963-1969 |
Richard M. Nixon (Rep.) 1969-1974 |
Gerald R. Ford (Rep.) 1974-1977 |
Jimmy (James E.) Carter (Dem.) 1977-1981 |
Ronald W. Reagan (Rep.) 1981-1989 |
George H. Bush (Rep.) 1989-1993 |
Bill Clinton (Dem.) since 1993 |
Vocabulary:
federalism |
Föderalismus |
federal |
Bundes- |
separation of powers |
Gewaltenteilung |
Constitution |
Verfassung |
amendment |
Zusatz (zur Verfassung) |
safeguard |
Schutz |
participation |
Mitwirkung, Teilnahme |
governor |
Gouverneur |
abuse |
Mißbrauch |
infringement |
Verletzung, Übergriff |
system of checks and balances |
System der gegenseitigen Kontrolle (Gewaltenteilung) |
county |
Landkreis |
peculiarity |
Eigenheit, Besonderheit |
executive |
ausführend |
legislative |
gesetzgebend |
judicial |
rechtssprechend |
branch |
Zweig |
Supreme Court |
Oberstes Bundesgericht |
head of state |
Staatsoberhaupt |
Commander-in-Chief |
Oberbefehlshaber der Streitkräfte |
leap year |
Schaltjahr |
unexpired |
(noch) nicht abgelaufen |
impeachment |
Anklage |
succession |
(Amts-)Nachfolge |
preside |
den Vorsitz haben |
approval |
Genehmigung |
majority |
Mehrheit |
census |
Volkszählung |
proposal |
Vorschlag |
ratify |
bestätigen |
Bill of Rights |
ersten 10 Zusatzartikel zur Verfassung |
adopt |
Gesetzesvorlage zustimmen |
primary (election) |
Vorwahl |
referendum |
Volksbefragung |
nominee |
(offizieller) Kandidat |
aspiring |
sich um ein Amt bemühend |
convention |
Versammlung, Parteitag |
presidential electors |
Wahlmänner bei Präsitentschaftswahl |
Electoral College |
Wahlmännergremium |
pledge |
geloben |
inaugurate |
in Amt einführen |
Referate über:
|
Datenschutz |
Copyright ©
2024 - Alle Rechte vorbehalten AZreferate.com |
Verwenden sie diese referate ihre eigene arbeit zu schaffen. Kopieren oder herunterladen nicht einfach diese # Hauptseite # Kontact / Impressum |