Presidential System
Presidential System
Introduction
Government is one of the essential elements of the State. It is the working agency of the
State. The importance of the Government in modern times is highly felt. Attempts have been
made from time to time to classify the various forms of Government.
Meaning
The title "president" has persisted from a time when such person personally presided over
the governing body, as with the President of the Continental Congress in the early United States,
prior to the executive function being split into a separate branch of government. There is an
intermediary system called semi-presidentialism.
Maurice Duverger stated that the presidential system is characterized by the principle of
the separation of powers, presidential elections by means of universal suffrage, presidential
appointment and removal of ministers and because none of them are not politically responsible to
the parliament.
The Executive Power is undivided. In the Presidential system, the chief of the state is not
merely the titular executive but he is real executive and actually exercises the powers which the
constitution and laws confer upon him. In such a system, the President is the real head. He is the
head of state as well as the head of government. In this system, the President enjoys real powers
of the government. He is not responsible to the legislature for his administration and policies.
Separation of Powers
There is separation of powers in the Presidential form of government. In this system the
executive and legislature are separate from each other and they have equal status. The President
is elected by people. Neither he nor his ministers are drawn from the legislature. They are not
accountable to it. They are independent of the legislature. He has a fixed tenure. He cannot be
easily ousted from office by the legislature. The only method of his ouster from office is
impeachment which is a very difficult process.
On the other hand, the President also cannot dissolve the legislature. Further, the
judiciary is independent of both the executive and the legislature. Thus, there is not only
separation of powers, but also check and balance in the Presidential system.
Though the three organs of the government are kept apart, they are also connected by the
system of checks and balances. Each organ of government exercises checks on the other two
organs so that a sort of balance is established.
Ministers are Accountable to the President
In a Presidential government, the President enjoys real powers of the administration and
he exercises all those powers, which are given to him under the constitution and the law. The
President appoints his ministers (or secretaries) who stay in office during his pleasure. They do
not belong to the legislature. Nor are they responsible to it. They are appointed on the basis of
their experience and expertise. The secretaries help the president in the administration and it
depends upon the will of the president to accept or reject their advice. They are 'President's men'.
He can remove them from office if he is not happy with them.
In a Presidential government the President and his secretaries are not responsible to the
legislature. The legislature cannot remove them through a vote of no-confidence. Moreover, an
adjournment motion or a censure motion cannot be brought against them. The President and his
secretaries are not the members of legislature and they do not attend its sessions. Thus, they
cannot be asked questions and supplementary questions.
Fixed Tenure
In a Presidential government, the President is elected for a fixed tenure and except
through impeachment for the violation of the constitution, he cannot be removed from his office
before the expiry of his term. The tenure of office cannot be lessened or increased under any
circumstances.
Transparency
In a presidential system, the balance of power tends to be more transparent since it aims
at defining the limits between the Executive and Legislative branches, even though there are
many collaboration alliances between them, and that members of one are not members of the
other at the same time, though there are exceptions.
Merits:
More Democratic
Because of the twin principles of separation of powers and check and balance, there is no
concentration of powers in the same man or in the same body. As a result, there is more of
democracy in this system.
As both the President and the legislature enjoy fixed terms of office, there is political
stability. There is continuity of policy. As a result, the government can think of long-term
policies.
People's President
The President is directly elected by people. He has thus reason to think that he enjoys
more of people's confidence and support than the Prime Minister in the Parliamentary system.
More Efficient
The President is free to choose his ministers. The Senate, the Upper House of American
Congress, may or may not ratify such appointments, but it cannot impose its choice on the
President. The President has thus the freedom to appoint very competent persons as his Ministers
or Secretaries on the basis of their experience and expertise. They are accountable only to the
President and not to the Congress. As a result, they have time to concentrate on their work and to
do their duty efficiently.
The President, being all powerful, is in a position to take bold and prompt decisions. His
ministers, being subordinate to him, cannot tie hands. They may advise him, but they have to
implement his decisions.
Best suited to Deal with Emergencies
The multiparty system is prone to political instability. Political parties with different
interests pull the political system in different directions. In order to check this, there is the need
of a strong executive and the Presidential government is best suited to establish stability in a
multiparty system.
The Presidential executive is of help in forging unity in the nation consisting of diverse
regions, communities and cult. As he is directly elected by people, they look upon him as the
symbol of their unity.
Demerits:
Dictatorial
As the President and his ministers are not members of legislature, they find it difficult to
persuade the members of the latter to accept proposals. The legislature is inclined to find fault
with the President, and vice versa. Conflict between the executive and the legislature leads to
deadlock in the administration.
Absence of Accountability
The executive is not accountable to the legislature. Nor is it accountable to people. The
people directly elect their President; they cannot recall him even if they find him incompetent or
dishonest or useless. President can be removed from office by the legislature through
impeachment, which is a very difficult process.
Rigidity
The Presidential system is too rigid to adapt itself to sudden changes in circumstances. To
manage a crisis, the ministers including the Prime Minister in Parliamentary system can be
replaced. But, however great the need, the President in a Presidential system cannot be replaced
during his tenure.
In the field of foreign policy, the President has handicaps. He has no power to declare a
war even when his country is attacked by enemy. This power belongs to the Congress. Similarly,
the treaty that he may conclude with another country is not valid if it is not ratified by the Senate.
There is thus some validity in the comment of Gamer that the Presidential system
government is 'autocratic, irresponsible and dangerous'.