no he can not
through an executive order
Congress is the lawmaker branch of the national government. The Supreme Court, the president and Congress all share the power to create laws.
There are none. The President does not have the power to create a law. That right belongs to Congress.
Actually the president can not create jobs except for a few who work at the White House. He can propose that Congress create public works programs that create government jobs. He can also propose that Congress pass laws that provide financial incentives to businesses that hire new people- these may or may not work. He could ask Congress to do what FDR did- draft a half-million men into the army.
The planning of expenditures of the United States Congress must create or come up with a budget. The country's budget proposal comes from the office of the President forwarded to the US Congress.
Congress and create a law limiting it's power, the senate can approve of it, and the president can sign it into law, or the president can simply veto the law into effect without Congress/Senate approval. But, it would be political suicide if that actually happened and it will probably be overturned shortly thereafter.
Yes, however it must be approved by congress.
Congress decides which laws get to pass but the president of the United States gets to create them. It is still up to congress though if they pass or not.
The planning of expenditures of the United States Congress must create or come up with a budget. The country's budget proposal comes from the office of the President forwarded to the US Congress.
checks and balances. That is, there are three branches of government. The Legislative Branch is congress (House and Senate)...they write laws. The Executive Branch is the President and his cabinet. The president signs or vetoes the laws that Congress creates. The Judicial Branch, which is the Supreme Court, interprets the laws created by Congress and signed by the President. The Congress are elected by the people of the land. So is the President. However, the Supreme court justices are selected by the president, and voted into their positions by congress, after a process of examination by the Congress. Checks and balances exists so that no one branch of government has all the power. The Congress makes laws but cannot make them INTO law, without the President's signature. The president can sign bills into law, but he has no power to create laws (unless he practices "Executive Order" which every president has done since the first: Abraham Lincoln made a law about eliminating slavery, WITHOUT congressional approval) the Supreme Court hears cases where the laws of the United States are exercised. They decide what is the just application of the laws created by the Congress and signed by the President. The Congress doesn't apply the law, and neither does the President.
The President and Congress create laws. The President can create an idea, but he has to put it through Congress before it is made. The majority of the congress has to agree with the law before it is passed. The President can also veto, or disapprove, law ideas that the Congress creates. But that veto can be jumped by 2/3 vote of congress.
The president appoints the cabinet, subject to Senate approval. He can not create or eliminate cabinet positions. Only Congress can do that.