The President can make speeches that give his ideas for legislation at any time. He gives an annual state of the union address, gives an address at his inauguration and he can make special speeches if situations arise that call for action and he has some new ideas.
It puts the laws and programs of Congress into effect
If the policy goes through Congress, it is a law. There are many policies that are determined by agencies of the government; they are simply policies.
In the American system of government, it is congress that makes the laws, but the president definitely plays an important role. For one thing, it is the president who champions and promotes his party's policies. The president has key priorities for which he serves as the "advocate in chief": members of his party bring his most crucial policy ideas forward in congress, where they are debated and sometimes voted upon; the president's hope is that these proposals will ultimately be passed, and turned into laws. And if a law passes with which he does not agree, the president does not have to sign it-- he can veto it and thus prevent it from taking effect. If that happens, the congress can try to override the president's veto.
Federal taxes are decided by congress, not the president, although he might have some effect on their decision.
The President's salary is set by Congress. However, in order to prevent bribery or threats by Congress against the President, the Constitution provides that any changes to the President's salary cannot take effect until the beginning of the next Presidential term.
Roger Sherman believed the President should be appointed by the legislature, because he saw the Presidency as an office whose sole duty was to carry out what Congress decreed. He felt that the President should not be accountable to anyone but Congress since he would be in effect Congress's agent and Congress has the supreme power of government.
he planned to reorganize the courts
Organizational decisions that are still in effect include: the president has the right to veto laws; the president has two four-year terms; the president has a cabinet.
No. Both halves of Congress have to approve it. If a treay doesn't pass the Senate, there is nothing the president can do.
The President can not spend money or levy taxes -- only the Congress can do that.The President can only make recommendations about the budget and spend money which Congress authorizes him to spend.
The President of the US has the duty to prevent laws passed by Congress from going into effect by using his powers to veto.
If the President of the United States refuses to sign a bill into law, he vetos it and returns it to the Congress. The Congress can, by 2/3 vote of both the House of Representatives AND the Senate, override the President's veto, and the law goes into effect without the President's approval.