Constitution of the United States: 2: The Executive Branch
2: The Executive Branch
Article 2 creates the executive branch of government headed by the President, elected, along with the Vice President, for a term of four years (see president; electoral college). The Twenty-second Amendment (1951) provides that no person may be elected President more than twice. The Twenty-third Amendment (1961) permits District of Columbia residents to vote in presidential elections. Since the adoption of the Constitution there have been two conflicting views of Article 2. The first is that the powers of the President are limited to those enumerated in the article. The opposite view is that the President is given executive power not limited by the provisions of the rest of the article. Every President has had to make the choice of interpretations for himself.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- The Other Amendments
- The Bill of Rights
- The Amendments
- 5: Amending the Constitution
- 4: The States
- 3: The Judiciary
- 2: The Executive Branch
- 1: Congress
- The Articles
- The Preamble
- Bibliography
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