President Nixon was an extreme Federalist to say the least. During his administration he sought to bypass the US congress in order to have things done his way. He undertook two methods to accomplish this. His task then was to control information flowing to the congress and to also control information coming from congress. He and his administration pursued a policy of making an enormous amount of claims based on executive privilege, and attacked legislative privilege in any way possible.
This was called New Federalism. Both President Nixon and President Reagan tried to reduce the powers of the federal government and give these powers back to the state.
Nixon adopted the policy of New Federalism with the intent to the reduce the size and scope of the federal government. Richard Nixon was the 37th U.S. President.
The Separation of Powers was brought into play by the Framer's of the Constitution of the United States. They wanted to make sure that no individual branch has absolute power of every other branch. They made sure that the Judicial Branch has the right to declare any rights to be unconstitutional. The Legislative Branch can impeach both the President and any Justices they feel are having misconduct of the way they are supposed to be working [Lying (Richard Nixon, Bill Clinton)]. The Legislative are also allowed to declare war even though the President is the Commander in Chief. The Executive Branch consists of the President, Vice-President, and the President's Cabinet Members. The Executive Branch is allowed to approve/sign or veto bills proposed by Congress. The President can appoint Justices. All in all, the Separation of Powers was put in play in order to create a strong Federal Government and no branch had dominate power.
Pardon Nixon and move on
Richard M. Nixon was the President implictated in the Watergate Scandal.
False
Vietnamization
to reduce the flow of communist supplies
to reduce the flow of communist supplies
US President Nixon expanded the President Eisenhower claim of almost total unchecked privilege for the executive branch. Not only that, Nixon, if possible, made for the White House, almost an absolute privilege system. He was also giving the White House staff expanded powers as well. Yes, there can be a debate as to whether President Lyndon Johnson really was the intermediary between Eisenhower and Nixon.
Gerald Ford replaced Nixon when he resigned his office.
US President Nixon expanded the President Eisenhower claim of almost total unchecked privilege for the executive branch. Not only that, Nixon, if possible, made for the White House, almost an absolute privilege system. He was also giving the White House staff expanded powers as well. Yes, there can be a debate as to whether President Lyndon Johnson really was the intermediary between Eisenhower and Nixon.