17.2.7

Executive

Test yourself

Similar and Different Powers

The President and Prime Minister mainly differ in their roles and powers, however, both are head of the executive branch of government and propose legislation to be passed.

Illustrative background for Similar powers 1Illustrative background for Similar powers 1 ?? "content

Similar powers 1

  • The President and Prime Minister are both chief executives and run the government’s executive branch.
    • The Prime Minister chairs meetings of the cabinet, creates new government roles and departments and heads the Civil Service.
    • The President uses the Executive Office of the President (EXOP) to help run the executive.
  • The President and Prime minister both have the role of submitting the annual budget.
Illustrative background for Similar powers 2Illustrative background for Similar powers 2 ?? "content

Similar powers 2

  • The President and Prime Minister both propose legislation to be passed through the legislature.
    • The Prime Minister’s proposals are made in the King’s Speech whilst the President proposes legislation in the State of the Union Address.
  • Both the President and Prime Minister can nominate members of the executive.
    • The Prime Minister has patronage powers to appoint politicians to the cabinet.
    • The president must have appointments confirmed by a Senate vote.
Illustrative background for Different powers Illustrative background for Different powers  ?? "content

Different powers

  • The President has powers which the Prime Minister does not have, including signing and vetoing legislation, pardon powers, the head of state role and judicial appointments.
  • The Prime minister plays an important role in the legislature, unlike the President, and has patronage powers.

Presidential and Prime Ministerial Powers

The president and prime minister mainly differ in their roles and powers, however, both are head of the executive branch of government and propose legislation to be passed.

Illustrative background for Presidential powers 1Illustrative background for Presidential powers 1 ?? "content

Presidential powers 1

  • The president appoints federal judges, including all Supreme Court justices.
    • The president nominates a judge who must be confirmed by a vote in the Senate, whilst in the UK the prime minister has no judicial appointment power.
  • The president can pardon citizens from criminal sentences.
Illustrative background for Presidential powers 2Illustrative background for Presidential powers 2 ?? "content

Presidential powers 2

  • The president has the power to sign a bill into law or veto the bill, whilst in the UK it is the monarch who signs the legislation.
    • If the president objects to legislation passed by Congress, they can veto it.
  • The president is the head of state, meaning that they are the figurehead of the USA and perform ceremonial functions on behalf of the country.
  • In the UK the monarch is the head of state.
  • The president uses persuasion and bargaining methods to pass their legislation through Congress.
Illustrative background for Prime Ministerial powers 1Illustrative background for Prime Ministerial powers 1 ?? "content

Prime Ministerial powers 1

  • The prime minister has a significant role in Parliament.
    • The prime minister appears before the House of Commons Liaison Committee which reviews all matters relating to select committees.
    • The prime minister is involved in key parliamentary debates and answers questions weekly at Prime Minister’s Question Time.
Illustrative background for Prime Ministerial powers 2Illustrative background for Prime Ministerial powers 2 ?? "content

Prime Ministerial powers 2

  • The prime minister has the power of patronage to appoint to positions other than the executive, and without needing the consent of Parliament.
    • The prime minister appoints peers to the House of Lords and bishops to the Church of England.
  • The prime minister and government pass its legislation through Parliament by using tools of party discipline such as party whips.

Accountability in the US and UK governments

The president and prime minister are both accountable to their legislatures, however, they are held to account in different ways because the president is separate from Congress whilst the prime minister is a member of Parliament.

Illustrative background for US accountability 1Illustrative background for US accountability 1 ?? "content

US accountability 1

  • Congress holds the president to account over their legislative proposals.
    • Congress can amend or reject bills from passing into law.
    • In 2018 the Senate failed to pass President Trump’s budget which led to a government shutdown.
  • The Senate has the power to reject any treaty proposed by the president.
Illustrative background for US accountability 2Illustrative background for US accountability 2 ?? "content

US accountability 2

  • The Senate can vote against the president’s nominations to the judiciary and executive.
  • Congress can vote to override a president’s veto if both chambers pass a two-thirds majority vote in favour.
  • Congress can investigate and impeach any member of the executive.
Illustrative background for UK accountabilityIllustrative background for UK accountability ?? "content

UK accountability

  • Departmental select committees summon government ministers to sit before it and answer in-depth questions on their department’s work.
  • Question time enables backbenchers to directly question ministers weekly on the actions of the government.
Illustrative background for UK accountability 2Illustrative background for UK accountability 2 ?? "content

UK accountability 2

  • Government legislation is scrutinised in debates on policy in the House of Commons and House of Lords.
  • MPs in the House of Commons can put forward a motion for a vote of no confidence in the government.
    • If a vote of no confidence is successful, there will be 14 days for a new government to form otherwise a general election takes place.

Jump to other topics

1Democracy & Participation

2Political Parties

3Electoral Systems

4Voting Behaviour & the Media

5Conservatism

6Liberalism

7Socialism

8The UK Constitution

9The UK Parliament

10The Prime Minister & the Executive

11Relationships Between Government Branches

12US Constitution & Federalism

13US Congress

14US Presidency

15US Supreme Court & Civil Rights

16US Democracy & Participation

17Comparing Democracies

18Feminism

19Nationalism

Go student ad image

Unlock your full potential with GoStudent tutoring

  • Affordable 1:1 tutoring from the comfort of your home

  • Tutors are matched to your specific learning needs

  • 30+ school subjects covered

Book a free trial lesson