All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #183 : National Government Institutions
Which one of the powers listed below is a constitutional power that the president shares with the Senate?
Veto bills
Receiving foreign emissaries
Granting pardons
Making treaties
Commissioning officers
Making treaties
The constitution stipulates that the Senate must approve all treaties negotiated by the President. Granting of pardons, vetoing bills, and receiving foreign emissaries are solely the powers of the President.
Example Question #12 : Presidential Procedures
Who has the role of breaking a tie in the Senate?
Senate Majority Leader
Speaker of the House
President
Senate Majority Whip
Vice President
Vice President
The constitution lays out the powers and responsibilities of the office of the Vice-President. One of those is to cast the tie-breaking vote in case of a tie within the Senate.
Example Question #184 : National Government Institutions
Congress can remove a president through __________.
veto
impeachment
executive privilege
sedition acts
executive order
impeachment
In case the president commits crimes or fails in their duty as President, the constitution lays out the procedure to have the president removed from office. Trial in the House and then formal impeachment can be conducted by the Senate.
Example Question #185 : National Government Institutions
A presidential veto may be overridden by a ___________ vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.
command
super majority
majority
majority
unanimous
majority
Part of the checks and balances, Congress has to power to override a presidential veto with a majority vote in both Houses. This ensures that the President is checked in their authority.
Example Question #186 : National Government Institutions
If the President dies, the Vice President takes over as the President of the United States. Following that, the Vice President can only serve one more term as President if they win the next election.
None of these answers is correct.
False, the two-term limit does not apply in this situation, a former Vice President can serve two full elected terms
False, the Vice-President can serve up to eight years, and therefore could be elected twice and have to leave the presidency during their second elected term
True, after serving as a President for any amount of time prior to election a person can serve only one additional term
False, the two-term limit does not apply in this situation, a former Vice President can serve two full elected terms
If the Vice President must take over for the President in the case of death, the two-term limit does not apply to those years that they serve as President. Therefore, if the former Vice President ran and won the next two election cycles, they could legally serve more than 8 years.
Example Question #187 : National Government Institutions
A __________ is: a device where two (or more) countries bind themselves together in an agreement. In the United States, this agreement must be ratified by 2/3 of the Senate before the US will be bound by the agreement.
Congressional Delegation
Treaty
Executive Order
Executive Agreement
Treaty
This should have been a relatively simple question. The correct answer is a treaty. Note how the definition in the question includes a key fact: the “agreement” must be ratified by 2/3 of the Senate. Any time you see language to that effect, you should immediately think “treaty.”
Example Question #188 : National Government Institutions
A ______________ is a device where two (or more) heads of state agree to act in a certain way, for a certain time (or until their respective interests are no longer served), and this agreement need not be ratified by the Senate.
Executive Order
Congressional Delegation
Treaty
Executive Agreement
Executive Agreement
This should have been a fairly simple question, except for one hiccup. One of the answers, “executive order,” might have caught some of you unawares—there is a vast difference in between an executive order and an executive agreement. Executive orders are beyond the scope of this question (although they’re covered in another). Executive agreement is the correct answer, as it clearly could not have been a treaty (the question specifically notes that NO ratification was required), and “congressional delegation” has no bearing on this whatsoever.
Example Question #189 : National Government Institutions
A(n) _______________ may either arise from an explicit delegation of power to the President or from implicit authority through the constitution. It has the force of law without being passed by Congress.
Executive Agreement
Directive
Agency Orders
Executive Order
Executive Order
This is a relatively difficult question. The correct answer is “executive order.” An executive order is an order from the president directing a federal agency to take some form of action (or, alternatively, refrain from taking action). It has the force of law—because it is, in a sense, implementing law.
Example Question #191 : National Government Institutions
Which of the following is/are among the president’s duty/ies in terms of legislation?
All of the answers are correct
Must report from “time to time” to congress with a state of the union address
May call Congress into special session
May veto laws
All of the answers are correct
This should have been a very simple question. The president has a very modest role in terms of legislation, however, he may veto laws, convene congress for a special session, and must deliver a state of the union address from “time to time.” That said, modern presidents often come into the office with their own legislative agenda, which they push on Congress in various ways (generally involving the media).
Example Question #192 : National Government Institutions
The Supreme Court declared the line-item veto unconstitutional in Clinton v. City of New York.
False, the case upheld the line item veto
True, this case restricted the president's ability to veto specific portions of a bill while allowing others to pass
None of these answers is accurate
False, Clinton v. City of New York was not a case concerned with the line-item veto
True, this case restricted the president's ability to veto specific portions of a bill while allowing others to pass
Although the president has the unfettered ability to veto bills he does not want to see signed into law, the president may not simply excise certain portions of bills even if Congress gives to him that ability. Essentially, the case was as follows: Congress delegated to the President the ability to strike certain portions of an appropriations bill (hence the line-item veto). The Supreme Court held that this was a violation of separation of powers, because after striking certain items from an appropriations bill, and then signing the rest, the President was signing into law a bill that Congress (technically) did not pass!