Recent changes Random page
GAMING
Hobbies
 
Bionicle Wiki
Vintage Patterns
Genealogy Wiki
Hot Wheels Wiki
Lego Wiki
Yo-yo Wiki
See more...

President of the United States

From Genealogy

Jump to: navigation, search
 

Template:Sprotect

President of
the United States

Official seal
Incumbent
George W. Bush
Conceiver George Washington
Formation April 30, 1789
Website whitehouse.gov/president

Template:Politbox |- !align=center style="background:#ccccff" width=192px | Federal governmentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif |- | |ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
TaxationImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif


|- | |President Vice PresidentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
CabinetImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif


|- |align=center |

Congress
Senate
President pro temImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
Party LeadersImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
HouseImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
SpeakerImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
Party LeadersImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
Congressional districtsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif

|- | |Federal courtsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif Supreme CourtImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
Circuit Courts of AppealImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
District CourtsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif |- !align=center style="background:#ccccff" | ElectionsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif |- | |Presidential electionsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
Midterm electionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs |- !align=center style="background:#ccccff" | Political PartiesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif |- | |DemocraticImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
RepublicanImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
Third partiesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif |- !align=center style="background:#ccccff" | StateImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif & Local governmentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif |- | |GovernorsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
LegislaturesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif (ListImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif)
State CourtsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
Local GovernmentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif |- |style="font-size:95%; padding: 0 5px 0 5px;" align=right|


Other countriesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif · AtlasImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
 US Government PortalImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif
v  d  e

|}

The President of the United States of America (sometimes abbreviated as POTUS)[1] is the head of stateImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and head of governmentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif of the United States. The president is at the head of the executive branchImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif of the federal governmentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, whose role is to enforce national law as given in the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and written by Congress. Article Two of the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif establishes the president as commander-in-chiefImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif of the armed forcesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and enumerates powers specifically granted to the president, including the power to sign into law or vetoImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif bills passed by both houses of Congress. The president also has the power to create a CabinetImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif of advisors and to grant pardonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs or reprieves. Finally, with the "advice and consentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif" of the Senate, to make treatiesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, appoint federal officers, ambassadorImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs, and federal judgeImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs, including Justices of the Supreme CourtImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. As with officials in the other branches of the United States government, the Constitution restrains the president with a set of checks and balancesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif designed to prevent any individual or group from taking absolute power.

The president is elected indirectlyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif through the United States Electoral CollegeImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif to a four year term, with a limit of two terms imposed by the Twenty-second Amendment to the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, ratified in 1951. Under this system, each state is allocated a number of electoral votes, equal to the size of the state's delegation in both houses of Congress combined. The District of ColumbiaImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif is also granted electoral votes, per the Twenty-third Amendment to the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. Voters in nearly all states choose a presidential candidate through the plurality voting systemImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, whom then receives all of that state's electoral votes. A simple majority of electoral votes is needed to become president; if no candidate receives that many votes, the election is thrown to the House of RepresentativesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, which votes by state delegation.

While in office, the White HouseImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in Washington, D.C. serves as the place of residence for the president; he is entitled to use its staff and facilities, including medical care, recreation, housekeeping, and security services. One of two Boeing VC-25Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif aircraft, which are extensively modified versions of Boeing 747Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif-200B airliners, serve as long distance travel for the president, and are referred to as Air Force OneImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif while the president is on board. A salary of $400,000, along with other benefits, is paid to the president annually.[2]

Since the adoption of the Constitution, forty-two individuals have been elected or succeeded into the presidency, the first being George Washington, serving forty-three presidencies altogether. The current president is George W. Bush, inaugurated on January 20, 2001 to a first term and on January 20, 2005 to a second. His term expires at noon on January 20, 2009, after which he will be replaced by the winner of the 2008 presidential electionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. From the middle of the twentieth century, the United States' status as a superpowerImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif has led the American president to become one of the world's most well-known and influential public figures. U.S. presidential electionsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif are regarded by many as events of international as well as national significance and are closely followed in many places around the world.

Contents

[edit] Origin

The Treaty of Paris (1783)Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif left the United States independent and at peace but with an unsettled governmental structure. The Second Continental CongressImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif had drawn up Articles of ConfederationImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in 1777, describing a permanent confederation but granting to the Congress—the only federal institution—little power to finance itself or to ensure that its resolutions were enforced. In part this reflected the anti-monarchyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif view of the Revolutionary period, and the new American system was explicitly designed to prevent the rise of an American tyrant to replace the British King.

George Washington, the first American president (1789–1797)
George Washington, the first American president (1789–1797)

However, during the economic depressionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif that followed the Revolutionary WarImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif the viability of the American government was threatened by political unrest in several states, efforts by debtors to use popular government to erase their debts, and the apparent inability of the Continental Congress to redeem the public obligationsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif incurred during the war. The Congress also appeared unable to become a forum for productive cooperation among the States encouraging commerce and economic development. In response a Constitutional ConventionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif was convened, ostensibly to reform the Articles of Confederation but that subsequently began to draft a new system of government that would include greater executive power while retaining the checks and balances thought to be essential restraints on any imperial tendency in the office of the president.

Before the 1788 ratification of the Constitution, there was no comparable figure with executive authority. Individuals who presided over the Continental CongressImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif during the Revolutionary period and under the Articles of Confederation had the title "President of the United States of America in Congress AssembledImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif", often shortened to "President of the United States". They had no important executive power. The president's executive authority under the Constitution, tempered by the checks and balances of the judicial and legislative branches of the federal government, was designed to solve several political problems faced by the young nation and to anticipate future challenges, while still preventing the rise of an autocrat over a nation wary of royal authority.

[edit] Qualifications

Article Two of the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif sets the qualifications required to become president. Presidents must be:

  • natural-born citizenImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs of the United States
  • at least thirty-five years old
  • must have been residentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in the United States for at least fourteen years

Citizens at the time of adoption of the Constitution were also eligible to become president, provided they met the age and residency requirements. While not an official requirement, the vast majority of presidents had prior experience as vice presidents, members of Congress, governors, or generals; in addition, thirty-one of forty-two presidents served in the military, all but one of them, James BuchananImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, as an officer. During the electoral process, experience or lack thereof is often given as a point in a presidential candidate's campaign.

Candidates usually must receive the backing of a major political party. This is not strictly required in order to be considered a serious candidate. Third-party candidate Ross PerotImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif received nearly 19% of the vote in the 1992 electionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif.

[edit] Election

A map of the United States showing the number of electoral votes currently allocated to each state; 270 electoral votes are required for a majority out of 538 overall
A map of the United States showing the number of electoral votes currently allocated to each state; 270 electoral votes are required for a majority out of 538 overall

Unlike most other countries using the presidential systemImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, presidents are elected indirectlyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in the United States. A number of electors, collectively known as the United States Electoral CollegeImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, select the president instead. Each state is allocated a number of electors, equal to the size of its delegation in both houses of Congress combined. Additionally, the Twenty-third Amendment to the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif grants electors to the District of Columbia as if it were a state, with the restriction that it may not have more representation than the least populated state. Electoral apportionment is adjusted every ten years, in alignment with the census. State legislaturesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif are constitutionally empowered to appoint electors, however, all of the fifty states have established their popular selection.

[edit] History

Article Two of the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif originally established the method of presidential election. It also used an electoral college, but there was a major difference in the voting system. Each elector cast two votes, with the intention that one would be used for a presidential and the other for a vice presidentialImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif candidate. The candidate with the highest number of votes would become the president, with the second-place candidate becoming the vice president.

However, the 1796Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and 1800Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif elections highlighted flaws in the electoral system in use at the time. In particular, the tie in the electoral vote that resulted from the lack of separation between presidential and vice presidential votes in the latter election was an issue. The Democratic-Republican PartyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif's candidates, who won the election, were tied with each other, and as a result, the election was thrown to the House of RepresentativesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in the outgoing Federalist PartyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif-controlled 6th CongressImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. Federalist representatives attempted to elect Aaron BurrImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, the Democratic-Republican candidate for vice president, over Thomas Jefferson, the presidential candidate. Jefferson eventually won after Alexander HamiltonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif managed to swing one state delegation's vote to him. As a result, Congress proposed the Twelfth Amendment to the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in 1803, and it was ratified in 1804. This amendment created the electoral system used today.

[edit] Campaign

The modern presidential campaign begins before the primary electionsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, which the two major political parties use to clear the field of candidates in advance of their national nominating conventionsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, where the most successful candidate is made the party's nominee for president. The party's presidential candidate chooses a vice presidential nominee and this choice is rubber-stamped by the convention. Also, the party establishes a platform on which to base its campaign. Although nominating conventions have a long history in the United States, their substantive importance in the political process has greatly diminished; however, they remain important as a way of energizing the parties for the general election and focusing public attention on the nominees.

Nominees participate in nationally televised debatesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, and while the debates are usually restricted to the DemocraticImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and RepublicanImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif nominees, third party candidates may be invited, such as Ross PerotImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in the 1992 debates. Nominees campaign across the country to explain their views, convince voters, and solicit contributions. Much of the modern electoral process is concerned with winning swing stateImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs through frequent visits and mass mediaImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif advertising drives.

[edit] Electoral College

President George W. Bush (second from left), walks with, from left, former Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Jimmy Carter during the dedication of the William J. Clinton Presidential Center and Park in Little Rock, Arkansas, November 18, 2004
President George W. Bush (second from left), walks with, from left, former Presidents George H.W. BushImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, Bill ClintonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, and Jimmy CarterImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif during the dedication of the William J. Clinton Presidential Center and ParkImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in Little Rock, Arkansas, November 18Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, 2004Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif

Voters in each of the states elect a president on Election DayImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, set by law as the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, once every four years; elections for other offices at all levels of government also occur on this date. Each state holds a number of electoral votes that correspond to electors in the Electoral College. Tickets of presidential and vice presidential candidates are shown on the ballot; each vote for the tickets actually corresponds to a vote for a slate of electors chosen by the candidates' political party. In most states, the ticket that wins the most votes in a state wins all of that state's electoral votes, and thus has their slate of electors chosen to vote in the Electoral College. MaineImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and NebraskaImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif do not use this method, opting instead to give two electoral votes to the statewide winner and one electoral vote to the winner of each Congressional district. Neither state has split electoral votes between candidates as a result of this system in modern elections. In any case, the winning set of electors meets at their state's capital on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December, a few weeks after the election, to vote, and sends a vote count to Congress.

The vote count is opened by the sitting vice president, acting in his capacity as President of the SenateImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, and read aloud to a joint sessionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif of the incoming Congress, which was elected at the same time as the president. Members of Congress can object to any state's vote count, provided that the objection is supported by at least one member of each house of Congress. A successful objection will be followed by debate; however, objections to the electoral vote count are rarely raised.

In the event that no candidate receives a majority of the electoral vote, the House of Representatives chooses the president from among the top three contenders. However, the House does not vote normally; instead, each state delegation is given only one vote, marginalizing the importance of more populous states. The vice president is chosen through normal voting in the Senate, where each state delegation is already of equal size.

[edit] Rationale

When the Constitution was written, the framers disagreed on the selection of the president: some favored national popular vote, while others wanted Congress to choose the president. The Electoral College was created as a compromise between the two proposals. It gave rural areas and smaller states a slightly larger role in determining the outcome of the election, and it continues to do so today; for example, the largest state by population, CaliforniaImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, only has about one electoral vote for every 660,000 residents, while the smallest, WyomingImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, has an electoral vote for about every 170,000.

Today, most of the electoral process is a formality in the public eye, as the choice of electors determines the result of the election, with a few exceptions. However, the Twelfth Amendment was written in a time when voters at large had little knowledge of candidates outside their state. As a result, the amendment accommodated this; the electors that voters had chosen were supposed to learn about the other candidates, and make an informed decision that represented the wishes of their constituents. Modern communication has rendered this unnecessary, and as a result, voters now choose between electors that are already pledged to a presidential candidate.

[edit] Term of office

A president's term of office begins at noon on January 20 of the year following the election. This date, known as Inauguration DayImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, marks the beginning of the president's and vice president's four-year terms. Before assuming office, the president-elect is constitutionally required to take the presidential oathImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif:

I do solemnly swear (or affirmImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.
Presidents traditionally include "So help me God" at the end of the oathImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif.

George Washington, the first president, set an unofficial term limit of two terms, which was generally followed by subsequent presidents as precedent. After the twelve-year presidency of Franklin D. RooseveltImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, who was elected four times, but died shortly after beginning his fourth term, the Twenty-second Amendment to the ConstitutionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif was ratified, barring presidents from being elected more than twice, or once if they served more than half of another president's term. Prior to Roosevelt, several presidents had campaigned for a third term, but none were elected. Harry S. TrumanImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, who was president at the time of the amendment's ratification and thus not subject to its terms, also briefly sought a third term before withdrawing from the 1952Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif race.

Since the amendment's ratification, three presidents have served two full terms: Dwight D. EisenhowerImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, Ronald ReaganImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, and Bill ClintonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. Richard NixonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif was elected to a second term, but resigned before completing it; George W. Bush will become the fourth upon completion of his current term on January 20, 2009. Lyndon B. JohnsonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif was the only president under the amendment to be eligible to serve more than two terms in total, having only served for 14 months following John F. KennedyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif's assassinationImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. However, he chose not to run in the 1968 electionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif.

[edit] Removal from office

See also: Impeachment in the United States and United States presidential line of succession
(From left) President George H.W. Bush, with former Presidents Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, Gerald R. Ford, and Richard Nixon at the dedication of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in 1991
(From left) President George H.W. BushImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, with former Presidents Ronald ReaganImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, Jimmy CarterImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, Gerald R. FordImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, and Richard NixonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif at the dedication of the Ronald Reagan Presidential LibraryImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in 1991

Vacancies in the office of President may arise because of death, resignation, or removal from office. Articles OneImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and Two of the Constitution allow the House of Representatives to impeach high federal officials, including the president, for "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors", and give the Senate the power to remove impeached officials from office, given a two-thirds vote to convict. Two presidents have thus far been impeached by the House, Andrew JohnsonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in 1868 and Bill ClintonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif in 1998. Neither was subsequently convicted by the Senate; however, Johnson was acquitted by just one vote.

Per the Twenty-fifth AmendmentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, the vice president and a majority of the CabinetImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif may suspend the president from discharging the powers and duties of the office once they transmit to the Speaker of the HouseImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and the President pro tempore of the SenateImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif a statement declaring the president's incapacity to discharge the duties of the office. If this occurs, then the vice president will assume the powers and duties of President as Acting PresidentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif; however, the president can declare that no such inability exists, and resume executing the Presidency. If the vice president and Cabinet contest this claim, it is up to Congress, which must meet within two days if not already in session, to decide the merit of the claim.

The United States Constitution mentions the resignation of the president but does not regulate the form of such a resignation or the conditions for its validity. By Act of Congress, the only valid evidence of the president's decision to resign is a written instrument declaring the resignation signed by the president and delivered to the office of the Secretary of StateImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif.[3] The only president to resign was Richard NixonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif on August 9Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, 1974Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif; he was facing likely impeachment in the midst of the Watergate scandalImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. Just before his resignation, the House Judiciary CommitteeImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif had reported favorably on articles of impeachment against him.

The Constitution states that the vice president is to be the president's successor in the case of a vacancy. If both the president and vice president are killed or unable to serve for any reason, the next officer in the presidential line of successionImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, currently the Speaker of the House, becomes acting president. The list extends to the President pro tempore of the Senate after the Speaker, followed by every member of the Cabinet in a set order.

[edit] Duties and powers

The president is the chief executiveImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif of the United States, putting him at the head of the executive branch of the government, whose responsibility is to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed". To carry out this duty, he is given control of the four million employees of the vast executive branch, including one million active duty personnel in the militaryImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. Both the legislativeImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif and judicialImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif branches maintain checks and balancesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif on the powers of the president, and vice versa.

Various executive and judicial branch appointments are made by presidents, including presidents-electImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. Up to 6,000 appointments may be made by an incoming president before he takes office, and 8,000 more may be made while in office. AmbassadorImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs, judgeImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs of the federal court systemImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, members of the CabinetImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, and other federal officers are all appointed by the president, with the "advice and consentImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif" of a simple majority of the Senate. Appointments made while the Senate is in recess are temporary and expire at the end of the next session of the Senate. He may also grant pardonImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gifs, as is often done just before the end of a presidential term.

In addition, while the president cannot directly introduce legislation, he can play an important role in shaping it, especially if the president's political party has a majority in one or both houses of Congress. While members of the executive branch are prohibited from simultaneously holding seats in Congress, they often write legislation and allow a member of Congress to introduce it for them. The president can further influence the legislative branch through the annual constitutionally mandated State of the Union AddressImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, which outlines the president's legislative proposals for the coming year. If Congress passes a bill that the president disapproves of, he may vetoImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif it; the veto can be overridden only by two-thirds of both houses of Congress, making it substantially more difficult to enact the law.

Perhaps the most important of all presidential powers is command of the armed forcesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif as commander-in-chiefImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif. The framers of the Constitution took care to limit the president's powers regarding the military; Federalist PapersImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif #69Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif writes in part:

The President is to be commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the United States. [...] It would amount to nothing more than the supreme command and direction of the military and naval forces [...] while that [the power] of the British king extends to the DECLARING of war and to the RAISING and REGULATING of fleets and armies, all [of] which [...] would appertain to the legislature.[4]


While the power to declare war is constitutionally vested in Congress, the president commands and directs the military and is responsible for planning military strategy. Congress, pursuant the War Powers ActImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, must authorize any troop deployments more than 60 days in length. Military spending and regulations are also governed by Congress, providing a check to presidential power. Along with the armed forces, foreign policyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif is also directed by the president, including the ability to negotiate treatiesImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, which must be ratified by two-thirds of the Senate.

[edit] Privileges of office

The president is entitled to use the White HouseImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif as his living and working quarters, and its entire staff and facilities, including medical care, kitchen, housekeeping and security staff. While travelling, the president is able to conduct the functions of the office from one of two custom-built Boeing 747Image:Wp_globe_tiny.gif aircraft, known as Air Force OneImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif.[5] The president also utilizes a United States Marine CorpsImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif helicopter, designated Marine OneImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif when the president is aboard. Similarly, "Navy OneImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif", "Army OneImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif," and "Coast Guard OneImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif" are the call signs used if the president is aboard a craft belonging to these services.[6] For ground travel, the president uses an armored presidential limousineImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif, currently a heavily modified Cadillac DTSImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif which uses the call sign "Cadillac One."

[edit] Salary

The First U.S. CongressImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif voted to pay George Washington a salary of $25,000 a year, about $566,000 in 2007 terms. Washington, already a wealthy man, refused to accept his salary, however, he asked for his living expenses to be covered. Theodore Roosevelt spent his entire $50,000 salary on entertaining guests at the White House.[7] John F. KennedyImage:Wp_globe_tiny.gif donated his salary to charities.[8]

Date established Salary Salary in 2007

dollars

September 24