The federal bureaucracy is under the direction of the President.
Truman was not successful in getting his program through Congress. Typically, a president will have the most success in getting Congress to agree to their programs in the first year they are in office.
yea
It is early in a President's first term when they are most likely to be successful in getting their policies through Congress. U. S. Presidents are limited to serving two 4-year terms.
No, he needs most of the rest of Congress to approve it first.
Johnson had been in congress for years before he was Vice President. He knew how to legislate and knew congress. Understanding government is a critical part of getting bills passed. President Ford once commented that the only difference between politics in his time and Washington's was his was lit by electricity and Washington used candles. Politics is more than just stopping legislative actions, but it is knowing how to negotiate a deal. We seem to have lost this idea.
getting his proposed legislation passed
Expell Impeach is for President and Vice-President Senate and Congress can't be Impeached, but with 2/3 vote from the other members the can be expelled
No, the Congress can't veto a bill. It is the Presidentwho can. Congress is the Legislative Branch of government, and it is their job to make the law by passing bills. The President is the head of the Executive Branch of government, and it is his option to either sign or refuse to sign a given bill.
McKinley sent troops to help in the Boxer Rebellion without getting permission from Congress and without declaring war.
Sally felt like she was getting the run-around when she visited the department of licensing to renew hers, and the clerks kept sending her to other clerks in the bureaucracy. No one in the bureaucracy seemed to know the answer to her question.
Yes- he stops getting his salary when he leaves office. However, he does get paid a pension, subject to the will of Congress.
It'll get getting more and more complex until it is removed entirely