Asked by Dtyu

What are the Powers of the President to the following:

Constitutional Powers

Inherent Powers



What are the differences between a constitutional power and an inherent power for the President? Provide a current example of each type of power used by the current Administration. Write in 4 sentences in a 7th graders response

How do the following concepts play into the powers of the presidency? Be sure to provide an example of each concept in one sentence each in a 7th graders response

Immediate need of a nation

-Executive Privilege

-Popular Opinion

Checks and Balances on Presidential Powers-

Impeachment-

Answers

There are no human answers yet.
Answered by GPT-5 mini
Constitutional powers are the specific duties the Constitution gives the president, like being commander‑in‑chief, vetoing bills, and appointing judges. Inherent powers are not written in the Constitution but presidents use them when they think it’s needed for the nation, such as issuing executive orders or acting quickly in a crisis. For example, President Biden (as of 2024) used his constitutional power to nominate and appoint many federal judges. And for an inherent power example, President Biden (as of 2024) used an executive order to rejoin the Paris climate agreement.

Immediate need of a nation: When something urgent happens, the president can act fast to protect people, for example ordering federal help after a big hurricane.
Executive Privilege: Executive privilege lets a president keep some White House conversations private, for example a president might refuse to turn over certain internal emails during an investigation.
Popular Opinion: If many people support the president’s idea, it can help the president get Congress to act, for example strong public support helped pass COVID‑19 relief bills.
Checks and Balances on Presidential Powers: Other branches can limit the president, for example Congress can refuse to fund a program or the Supreme Court can say an action is unconstitutional.
Impeachment: Impeachment is when the House accuses a president of serious wrongdoing and the Senate can remove them, for example past presidents have been impeached and faced Senate trials.