Either the power window motor is bad or the window is binding in the track mechanism.
The blower motor is drawing to many amps, replace the blower motor.
It is drawing .06 amps.
The blower is drawing to many amps. Have it checked. If that's not it. your blower motor is shorted out. Om the motor to the frame.
The switch will use no wattage whatsoever. The load on that switch is what uses power. If you know the load is 5 amps then 5 amps at 120 volts is 600 watts.
A pool pump motor which is drawing half the amps listed on its nameplate can indicate a problem with the windings or a lack of incoming current. Pumps will only draw as many amps as are required to operate under the current load.
The amperage is printed on the ballast. If your meter reads higher that that what is printed there, then the ballast is drawing more amps that it should.
The blower motor is failing and drawing too many amps.
I have a single phase induction motor. It draws 8 amps on start up and climbs to 14-15 amps when I put a load on it. When I don't have a load it runs at 1 and climbs to 2-3 amps. It is normal operation for this motor to run at the lower number of amps with a load. But I don't know what is wrong.
There is a high current draw on the circuit and the switch is getting old. Change out the switch, see if you can find a 20 amp switch as the internal contacts are designed to take the higher amperage. Check how many lamps are in the circuit in watts, add them together and use the formula for amps. Amps = Watts/Volts (120).
The blower resistor is probably bad, due to a failing blower motor that is drawing too many amps.
If the window won't go up from only one switch it is most likely that switch. If it won't go up from the driver controls or the control on that window's door, then you probably have a problem with the window motor.
Try reseting the computer. My 92 Deville did that on day and it turned out to be a faulty air compressor drawing to many amps..