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How much power does the president really have?/ExerciseD1
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Lesson:How much power does the president really have?
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Listening Exercise
1
Watch the video and complete the text according to what you can understand.
- A lot of
want the president of the United States to
us from our enemies, from the
and other really big things. So, we're trying to figure out: what
of power does the president really have? To
that question we sat down with George Edwards, distinguished
of political science and a leading scholar on the presidency.
GE: The president has much
power than people think and they have much less power than you
think from what you
candidates promise on the campaign trail. And I don't
that promises aren't sincere because
always they are. But presidents, once they take office, run into some
hard realities. And the first reality is that they
connect unilaterally. They share power primarily with congress and congress,
, in modern American politics, is populated with the opposition, as it is
now. And so presidents
in and think that after two years of campaigning they
be pretty persuasive fellows, after all,
won the big prize in
and they've been basically
nothing but talking for two years. But that's a bit
because you are simply drawing a comparison with
candidate and that's different than convincing people to support a
piece of policy. And it's almost
the case that the public doesn't move in the president's
or it actually moves a little bit in the opposite direction. So, presidents
fail in their effort to win the
and, therefore, they don't have the kind of leverage that they want in moving congress.
2
Part 2.
- So, if we can't
the president to just fly in and save day, how do we get
done in this country?
GE: The founding fathers, they
what they were doing, they divided power, they decentralized power, they specifically designed an inefficient
and that forces deliberation and it
compromising. So, if there's no people in the
, there's no people with whom you can cut a deal and if compromise
a dirty word and you're viewed as a traitor to your party, then
is very little chance of doing
. I'll give you an example, senator Lindsey Graham, a very
guy and a long time clear conservative. And he found that
by talking to the white house and trying to work out issues on climate
and on immigration that he was condemned by his
party. That's just an
of the kinds of problems that you face when
must feel that the opposition
are untrustworthy and,
, you can't compromise with them. So, to
about change, you have to compromise. That's a
thing in my mind. And voters have to {`support _7 } candidates who are willing to compromise. You have to be
to give up something. You can't argue that I should get everything I want and the other side can have nothing that they want. And you got to support candidates who are willing to talk to the other side sincerely and to compromise and I don't know any
way to actually deal with the kinds of
that we face.
- All right, thanks for chatting with us.
GE: Thank you, bye bye.
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