General Discussion Undecided where to post - do it here. |
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The gentleman in my avatar, John Adams, first VP of the US, was actually excluded from cabinet meetings by George Washington, on the ground that Adams, as VP, was part of the legislative branch, and so having him at a cabinet meeting would violate the seperation of powers. So the argument isnt THAT far fetched.
OTOH Cheney DOES attend cabinet meetings. "Susan Low Bloch, a constitutional professor at Georgetown University Law Center, called Cheney's position a "novel claim." Although most people think of vice presidents as executive officials, she added that it's really "a bit of a hybrid" role. As vice president, Cheney receives his paycheck from the U.S. Senate, which also pays the salaries of much of his staff. However, he also sits in Cabinet meetings and has an office at the White House." |
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Originally posted by Vesayen
That thread is 3 days old, and on a different topic. That is on Cheneys denials. The topic of this, is on one specific way in which he denied to play ball, which is to be franks, insane. From the article posted in the thread we already have on this topic: Cheney's office provided the information in 2001 and 2002, then stopped. Henry Waxman, chairman of the committee, said Cheney's office claims it need not comply with the executive order because it is not an "entity within the executive branch." Yes, your thread is a duplicate. |
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Originally posted by Koyaanisqatsi
Directly contradicting yourself in the press is generally not a good thing. Do you think he actually cares about what people think? He is telling everyone to go **** themselves and gets away with it. I expect a coup lead by him early next year to ensure that he is installed as emperor. He will be connected to a machine that will insure he lives forever. |
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Originally posted by Lorizael
Remember, though, that this was the case when the VP was the losing presidential candidate and a rival to the president. Nowadays the two are supposed to be a team, and the constitution really does seem to indicate, in pretty clear language, that the VP is a member of the executive branch. John Adams was not in fact a rival to George Washington, and was more "pro-Washington" than Jefferson was. |
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Originally posted by Lorizael
But he wasn't George's running mate... At the time, did other candidates realistically expect to be able to beat Washington? Or did they believe themselves to be fighting for second place - the vice presidency. This is an honest question; I'm curious. The latter, I'm quite sure, was the case during the relevant election, in 1789. The next election in 1792, I think was still the case - Jefferson was consciously running against Adams, not Washington, though J's relations with W were starting to grow strained. Adams, if not W's running mate legally, was clearly in the Federalist faction with Hamilton that tended to rally around W on controversial issues, such as Hamilton's financial plan, and the Jay treaty (though Im foggy on the date of the latter). |
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Originally posted by Patroklos
Then kindly point the relevant portion out, because the portion you posted says nothing of the sort. Article II Executive Section 4 - Disqualification The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors. VP is defined by virtue of this section as being part of the executive. |
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