Yes
yes
It gives congress the ability to remove the president for wrongdoing.
The president was the guy in the blue jacket
No, the president does not have the power to remove the vice president from office. The only way the vice president can be removed from office is through the impeachment process by Congress.
Yes, Congress has the authority to impeach a president, which involves charging the president with misconduct. However, the president does not possess the power to remove a member of Congress; that authority lies solely with Congress itself, which can expel its members through a majority vote. This separation of powers is designed to maintain a system of checks and balances within the government.
The Senate can remove Federal officials from office. The Senate is responsible for initiating an impeachment of a President of the United States. The Senate can also vote to have a member of the Senate removed for misconduct.
The Senate is the house of Congress that tries the president on charges of impeachment. If the House of Representatives votes to impeach the president, the Senate conducts the trial and has the authority to remove the president from office with a two-thirds majority vote.
Certainly not! Only the Congress can do that.
No, the president does not have the power to remove the vice president from office. The only way a vice president can be removed is through the impeachment process by Congress.
Power of the purse: congress can limit funding on things like war the president supportsAppointment confirmation: congress has to agree on the appointment of officials by the president.Congress can remove a president that is not doing his/her job.
The removal power refers to the power of the President to remove non-elected government employees from their jobs. The power is controversial because of several factors. One is that federal judges serve for life, unless impeached by Congress. However, other positions such as the Fair Trade Commission have judicial powers, even if they are not judges. Can the President remove them? If the president wants to remove a lower-level employee that he did not appoint, but the supervisor of that employee does not want to remove him, can the President remove the supervisor ? Can the President remove government employees appointed by Congress, such as a special prosecutor?
The president can veto any bill passed by Congress. This stops a divided Congress since a 2/3 majority is required to pass the bill over the veto. The president can fail to enforce laws that he does not like. Congress can fight back with impeachment or censure but there are usually serious political costs to such actions, so Congress often does nothing. The president can also use a "carrot and stick" approach to influence individual Congress members.