foreign policy
not written in the constitution
not written in the constitution
The legislative branch is the president, vice president, senate, they are the biggest leaders and can make the most disastrous or most beneficial changes for the country.
constitution
In most countries that have a president, the length of term is specified in a written document, such as a constitution.
the original constitution
There are many roles that provide the President with the ability to give executive order. It is the Congressional Acts and the US Constitution that provides for these capabilities for the president when they are acting on the best interests of the country.
impeachment There is not a lot of need for checks on the President since the President has no power not specifically granted to him by the U.S. Constitution. But when a President starts asserting power not granted to him, he must be impeached.
No. There is no mention of political parties in the Us Constitution. They did not exist in the US when the Constitution was written and I don't think most of the framers even thought about the possibility of their formation.
The President has the most power in his or her role as the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces. Information for the executive branch is laid out in Article Two of the United States Constitution.
When the constitution was written, the idea of electing a president was a radical idea. The rulers of Britain were mostly nobles who were born into the job. The writers of the constitution wanted the president to be someone who was well-established in the traditions of the US - not a foreigner who managed to get himself elected. There were a large number of immigrants in the US, most of them poorly educated. Without this requirement, they might have been able to elect one of their own as president. The writers of the constitution were the aristocrats of their day. Most of were from families who had lived in the US for several generations. They had a certain distrust of the new immigrants mostly lived in the frontier western lands.
Ordering United states troops into a foreign country to protect American citizens.