Inventing the American presidency Kenneth C. Davis

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

The Oval Office,

Inauguration Day,

Rose Garden signings,

and secret service agents

with dark sunglasses and cool wrist radios.

For a moment, forget all of it.

Toss out everything you know about the President.

Now, start over.

What would you do if you had to invent the President?

That was the question facing the 55 men

who got together in secret

to draw up the plans for a new American government

in the summer of 1787 in Philadelphia,

in the same place where the Declaration of Independence

had been written eleven years earlier.

Declaring independence had been risky business,

demanding ferocious courage

that put lives and fortunes in jeopardy.

But, inventing a new government was no field day either,

especially when it’s summer

and you’re in scratchy suits,

and the windows are closed

because you don’t want anybody

to hear what you are saying,

and the air conditioning doesn’t work

because it won’t be invented for nearly 200 years.

And, when you don’t agree on things,

it gets even hotter.

For the framers, the question they argued over most

while writing the Constitution

and creating three branches of government

had to do with the executive department.

One man or three to do the job?

How long should he serve?

What would he really do?

Who would pick him?

How to get rid of him

if he’s doing a bad job or he’s a crook?

And, of course, they all meant him,

and he would be a white man.

The idea of a woman

or an African American, for instance,

holding this high office

was not a glimmer in their eyes.

But the framers knew they needed

someone who could take charge,

especially in a crisis, like an invasion or a rebellion,

or negotiating treaties.

Congress was not very good

at making such important decisions

without debates and delays.

But the framers thought America needed a man

who was decisive and could act quickly.

They called it energy and dispatch.

One thing they were dead-set against:

there would be no king.

They had fought a war against a country with a monarch

and were afraid that one man

with unchecked powers, in charge of an army,

could take over the country.

Instead, they settled on a president

and laid out his powers in Article 2 of the Constitution.

But who would choose him?

Not the people, they were too liable to be misled

as one framer worried.

Not the legislature, that would lead to cabal and factions.

Got it: electors, wise, informed men

who have time to make a good decision.

And if they didn’t produce a winner,

then the decision would go to one

of the other branches of government, the Congress.

The House of Representatives would step in

and make the choice,

which they did in 1801 and 1825.

In the long, hot summer of 1787,

compromises were made to invent the presidency,

like counting slaves as 3/5 of a person,

giving the President command of the army

but Congress the power to declare war,

and unlimited four-year terms.

Since then, some of those compromises have been amended

and the men in office have sometimes been too strong or too weak.

But, if you could start from scratch,

how would you redesign the Oval Office?