The Role Of Executive Branch In The United States Government

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Role of Executive Branch The United States Government is divided into three branches of government. These three branches are the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial branches. The legislative branch consists of congress, and congress is responsible for making laws. Next, is the executive branch, this ranch consists of the president, vice president, and other courts. The executive branch is responsible for carrying out and enforcing laws. The third branch of government is the judicial branch. The judicial branch consists of the Supreme Court, and other federal courts. This branch of government applies laws to individual cases and evaluates laws (USA, 2016). This paper will primarily discuss the roles of the executive branch and its influence …show more content…

The executive branch has progressed overtime. “Early presidents relied on their cabinets to develop policy and submit it directly to congress” (Morone & Ehlke, 2013). Beginning with Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency the executive branch relied less on their cabinets and overlapped “advisors, committees, and programs” (2013). These loosely run roles have changed with President Obama’s presidency. President Obama runs a more tightly organized administration. The president is responsible for enforcing the laws drafted by congress. “Overtime, the president’s office has grown more technical, more sophisticated, more powerful, and more overtly political Every president must learn how to manage his own office, decide how much to delegate to the cabinet agencies, and then find a way to coordinate the entire enterprise” (2013). The executive branch is taking more of an active role in healthcare policy which is evident with President Obama’s enactment of the Affordable Care …show more content…

Also, other presidents may follow suite, I’m not sure whether the Affordable Care Act will remain in place, or whether another president will propose another health care reform policy and strive to put that policy forth. This could be the goal of the executive branch in the future. “Only three presidents since the institution of popular voting for the senate have met the bar: Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, and Barack Obama, Obama is the only one of those to tackle health care reform. President Obama “assembled a team of White House staff and cabinet members to provide leadership and organization for the executive branches work on health care reform.” (Kaiser Family Foundation,

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