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Vice President of the United States - Role of the Vice President

Vice President of the United States - Role of the Vice President: Encyclopedia II - Vice President of the United States - Role of the Vice President

Vice President of the United States - President of the Senate. As President of the Senate (Article I, Section 3), the Vice President oversees procedural matters and may cast a tie-breaking vote. There is a strong convention within the U.S. Senate that the Vice President not use his position as President of the Senate to influence the passage of legislation or act in a partisan manner, except in the case of breaking tie votes. As president of the Senate, Adams cast twenty-nine tie-breaking votes—a record that no ...

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Vice President of the United States: Encyclopedia II - Vice President of the United States - Role of the Vice President



Vice President of the United States - Role of the Vice President

Vice President of the United States - President of the Senate

As President of the Senate (Article I, Section 3), the Vice President oversees procedural matters and may cast a tie-breaking vote. There is a strong convention within the U.S. Senate that the Vice President not use his position as President of the Senate to influence the passage of legislation or act in a partisan manner, except in the case of breaking tie votes. As president of the Senate, Adams cast twenty-nine tie-breaking votes—a record that no successor has ever threatened. His votes protected the president's sole authority over the removal of appointees, influenced the location of the national capital, and prevented war with Great Britain. On at least one occasion he persuaded senators to vote against legislation that he opposed, and he frequently lectured the Senate on procedural and policy matters. Adams' political views and his active role in the Senate made him a natural target for critics of the Washington administration. Toward the end of his first term, as a result of a threatened resolution that would have silenced him except for procedural and policy matters, he began to exercise more restraint in the hope of realizing the goal shared by many of his successors: election in his own right as president of the United States.

In practice, the Vice President rarely presides over day-to-day matters in the Senate; in his place, the Senate chooses a President pro tempore (or "president for a time") to preside in the Vice President's absence, and the Senate maintains a Duty Roster for the post so that no single Senator serves in the post more than any other.

One duty required of President of the Senate is presiding over the U.S. Electoral College. This is the process of the counting and presentation of the Presidential and Vice Presidential electoral votes in the presence of both houses of Congress, on January 6 of the year following a U.S. presidential election. In this capacity, only four Vice Presidents have been able to announce their own election to the Presidency: John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Martin Van Buren, and George H. W. Bush.

Though he was President of the Senate, Vice President John C. Calhoun believed he would have more power as a Senator. When he was elected to the Senate from his native South Carolina, he became the first Vice President to resign the office.

Vice President of the United States - Growth of the office

For much of its existence, the office of Vice President was seen as a little more than a minor position. John Adams, the first Vice President, described it as "the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived or his imagination conceived." Even 150 years later, 32nd Vice President John Nance Garner famously described the office as "not worth a pitcher of warm piss" (at the time reported with the bowdlerization "spit"). Thomas R. Marshall, the 28th Vice President, lamented: "Once there were two brothers. One went away to sea; the other was elected Vice President of the United States. And nothing was heard of either of them again." When the Whig Party was looking for a vice president on Zachary Taylor's ticket, they approached Daniel Webster who said of the offer "I do not intend to be buried until I am dead." The natural stepping stone to the Presidency was long considered to be the office of Secretary of State. It has only been fairly recently that this notion has reversed; indeed, the notion was still very much alive when Harry Truman became the Vice President for Franklin Roosevelt.

For many years, the Vice President was given few responsibilities. After John Adams attended a meeting of the President's Cabinet in 1791, no Vice President did so again until Thomas Marshall stood in for President Woodrow Wilson while he travelled to Europe in 1918 and 1919. Marshall's successor, Calvin Coolidge, was invited to meetings by President Warren G. Harding. The next Vice President, Charles G. Dawes, was not invited after declaring that "the precedent might prove injurious to the country." Vice President Charles Curtis was also precluded from attending by President Herbert Hoover.

In 1933, Roosevelt raised the stature of the office by renewing the practice of inviting the Vice President to cabinet meetings, which has been maintained by every President since. Roosevelt's first Vice President, John Nance Garner broke with him at the start of the second term, on the Court-packing issue, and became Roosevelt's leading political enemy. Garner's successor, Henry Wallace was given major responsibilities during the war, proved incompetent, and was relieved of actual power. Roosevelt kept his last Vice President Harry Truman uninformed on all war and postwar issues, such as the atomic bomb. The need to keep Vice Presidents informed on national security issues became clear, and Congress made the Vice President one of four statutory members of the National Security Council in 1949.

Richard Nixon reinvented the office of Vice-President. Although he had no formal power, he had the attention of the media and the Republican party. Eisenhower ordered him to preside at Cabinet meetings in his absence. Nixon demonstrated for the first time that the office could be a springboard to the White House; most Vice Presidents since have followed his lead and sought the presidency. (Nelson Rockefeller did not, and it is widely believed that Dick Cheney will not.) Nixon was the first Vice President actually to step in to run the government temporarily: when Eisenhower suffered a heart attack on September 24, 1955; ileitis in June 1956; and a stroke in November 1957.

Vice President of the United States - Modern role

The formal powers and role of the Vice President are limited to the Presidency of the Senate, including a casting vote in the event of a deadlock. This was important in the first half of 2001, as the Senators were divided 50-50 between Republicans and Democrats and thus Dick Cheney's tie-breaking vote gave the Republicans the Senate majority. (See 107th United States Congress.)

Their other functions are as a drafter and spokesperson for the administration's policy, as an adviser to the President, as Chairman of the Board of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), as a Member of the board of the Smithsonian Institution, and as a symbol of American concern or support. Their influence in this role depends almost entirely on the characteristics of the particular administration. Cheney, for instance, is widely regarded as one of George W. Bush's closest confidantes. Al Gore was an important advisor to President Bill Clinton on matters of foreign policy and the environment. Often, Vice Presidents will take harder-line stands on issues to ensure the support of the party's base while deflecting partisan criticism away from the President. They often meet heads of state or attend state funerals in other countries, at times when the administration wishes to demonstrate concern or support without having to actually send the President to do so.

Normally, candidates for President will name a candidate for Vice President when they are assured of the party's nomination. Since the Presidential candidate is now generally known before the party convention, this announcement is now typically made in the first day or so of the party convention. Generally, the choice of running mate is ultimately made by the Presidential candidate alone (although with considerable counsel from advisors) and often is done to create balance on a ticket. It is common for the Vice Presidential candidate to come from a different region of the country than the President or appeal to a slightly different ideological wing of the party. The 12th Amendment discourages the Vice President from legally residing in the same state as the President, as Electors must vote for at least one candidate not in the same state as themselves. However, the ease of changing one's state of residence (as Richard Cheney did in 2000) minimizes the effect of this provision.

In recent years, the Vice Presidency has frequently been used to launch bids for the Presidency. Of the 13 presidential elections from 1956 to 2004, 9 featured the incumbent President; the other 4 (1960, 1968, 1988, 2000) all featured the incumbent Vice President. Former Vice Presidents also ran, in 1984 (Walter Mondale), and in 1968 (Richard Nixon, against the incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey).

Since 1974, the official residence of the Vice President and his family has been Number One Observatory Circle, on the grounds of the United States Naval Observatory in Washington, DC.

Other related archives

107th United States Congress, 12th Amendment, 1796, 1800, 1836, 1884, 1953, 1955, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1968, 1984, 1985, 1988, 2000, 2002, 25th Amendment, Aaron Burr, Abraham Lincoln, Acting President, Adlai Stevenson, Al Gore, Amendment XII, Amendment XXV, Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson, Article I, Bill Clinton, Cabinet, Calvin Coolidge, Charles G. Dawes, Chester Arthur, Congress, Constitution, Dan Quayle, Daniel Tompkins, Daniel Webster, Democratic-Republican, Dick Cheney, Dwight Eisenhower, Eisenhower, Elbridge Gerry, Federalist, Franklin Roosevelt, Garret Hobart, George Clinton, George H. W. Bush, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, George Washington, Gerald Ford, Great Britain, Harry Truman, Henry Wallace, Henry Wilson, Herbert Hoover, Hubert Humphrey, James Garfield, James Madison, James Sherman, January 6, John Adams, John C. Calhoun, John Garner, John Kennedy, John Nance Garner, John Quincy Adams, John Tyler, July 13, June 29, Lyndon Johnson, Martin Van Buren, Millard Fillmore, NASA, National Security Council, Nelson Rockefeller, New York City, November 22, Number One Observatory Circle, President pro tempore, President of the Senate, President of the United States, Representatives, Richard Johnson, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Secretary of State, Senate, Senators, September 24, Smithsonian Institution, South Carolina, Spiro Agnew, Texas, Theodore Roosevelt, Thomas Hendricks, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Marshall, Thomas R. Marshall, U.S. Electoral College, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. Senate, U.S. presidential election, United States Naval Observatory, United States government, Vice Presidential Service Badge, Walter Mondale, Warren G. Harding, Warren Harding, Washington, DC, Whig Party, William Harrison, William McKinley, William Rufus de Vane King, Woodrow Wilson, Wyoming, Zachary Taylor, absolute majority, assassination of President Kennedy, atomic bomb, bowdlerization, break any tie votes, cast a tie-breaking vote, casting vote in the event of a deadlock, election of 1796, election of 1800, heart attack, ileitis, no contest, piss, presidential line of succession, tie-breaking votes



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Role of the Vice President", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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