Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution

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The Twenty-fifth Amendment (Amendment XXV) to the United States Constitution addresses issues related to presidential succession and disability.

It clarifies that the vice president becomes president if the president dies, resigns, or is removed from office by impeachment. It also establishes the procedure for filling a vacancy in the office of the vice president. Additionally, the amendment provides for the temporary transfer of the president's powers and duties to the vice president, either on the president's initiative alone or on the initiative of the vice president together with a majority of the president's cabinet. In either case, the vice president becomes the acting president until the president's powers and duties are restored.

The amendment was submitted to the states on July 6, 1965, by the 89th Congress, and was adopted on February 10, 1967, the day the requisite number of states (38) ratified it.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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Text and effectEdit

Section 1: Presidential successionEdit

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Section 1 clarifies that in the enumerated situations the vice president becomes president, instead of merely assuming the powers and duties of the presidency as acting president.<ref name="auto1" /> It operates automatically, without needing to be explicitly invoked.Template:R

Section 2: Vice presidential vacancyEdit

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Section 2 provides a mechanism for filling a vacancy in the vice presidency. Before the Twenty-fifth Amendment, a vice-presidential vacancy continued until a new vice president took office at the start of the next presidential term; the vice presidency had become vacant several times due to death, resignation, or succession to the presidency, and these vacancies had often lasted several years.<ref name="auto1" />

Section 3: President's declaration of inabilityEdit

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Section 3 allows the president to voluntarily transfer presidential authority to the vice president (for example, in anticipation of a medical procedure) by declaring in writing his inability to discharge the presidency's powers and duties. The vice president then assumes those powers and duties as acting president.Template:NoteTag The vice president does not become president; the president remains in office without authority. The president regains those powers and duties upon declaring in writing his ability to discharge them.Template:R

Section 4: Declaration by vice president and cabinet members of president's inabilityEdit

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Section 4 addresses the case of a president who cannot discharge the powers and duties of the presidency but also cannot, or does not, execute the voluntary declaration contemplated by SectionTemplate:Nbsp3.Template:R It allows the vice president, together with a "majority of either the principal officers of the executive departments or of such other body as Congress may by law provide",Template:NoteTag to issue a written declaration that the president is unable to discharge his duties. When such a declaration is sent to Congress, the vice president immediately becomes acting president,Template:NoteTag while (as with SectionTemplate:Nbsp3) the president remains in office, temporarily divested of authority.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

John Feerick, the principal draftsman of the amendment,Template:RTemplate:RTemplate:Refn writes that Congress deliberately left the terms unable and inability undefined "since cases of inability could take various forms not neatly fitting into [a rigid] definitionTemplate:Nbsp... The debates surrounding the Twenty-fifth Amendment indicate that [those terms] are intended to cover all cases in which some condition or circumstance prevents the President from discharging his powers and duties".Template:HspTemplate:R A survey of scholarship on the amendment found Template:Quote Among potential examples of such unforeseen emergencies, legal scholars have listed kidnapping of the president and "political emergencies" such as impeachment. Traits such as unpopularity, incompetence, impeachable conduct, poor judgment, or laziness might not in themselves constitute inability, but should such traits "rise to a level where they prevented the President from carrying out his or her constitutional duties, they still might constitute an inability, even in the absence of a formal medical diagnosis." In addition, a president who already manifested disabling traits at the time he was elected is not thereby immunized from a declaration of inability.Template:R

The "principal officers of the executive department[s]" are the 15 Cabinet members enumerated in the United States Code at Template:Usc:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Template:Div col

Template:Div col end Acting secretaries can participate in issuing the declaration.Template:RTemplate:R

If the president subsequently issues a declaration claiming to be able, then a four-day period begins during which the vice president remains acting president.Template:R<ref name=readers>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp If, by the end of this period, the vice president and a majority of the "principal officers" have not issued a second declaration of the president's inability, the president resumes his powers and duties; but if they do issue a second declaration within the four days, then the vice president remains acting president while Congress considers the matter. Then, if within 21 days the Senate and the House determine, each by a two-thirds vote, that the president is unable, the vice president continues as acting president; otherwise the president resumes his powers and duties.Template:NoteTag

Section 4's requirement of a two-thirds vote in both the House and the Senate is stricter than the Constitution's requirement for impeachment and removal of the president for "high crimes and misdemeanors"—a majority of the House followed by two-thirds of the Senate.Template:RTemplate:RefnTemplate:Refn<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In addition, an impeached president retains his authority unless and until the Senate votes to remove him or her at the end of an impeachment trial; in contrast, should Congress be called upon to decide the question of the president's ability or inability under SectionTemplate:Nbsp4, presidential authority remains in the hands of the vice president (as acting president) unless and until the question is resolved in the president's favor.Template:R

Historical backgroundEdit

[[Article Two of the United States Constitution#Clause 6: Vacancy and disability|ArticleTemplate:NbspII, SectionTemplate:Nbsp1, ClauseTemplate:Nbsp6]] of the Constitution reads: Template:Quote

This provision is ambiguous as to whether, in the enumerated circumstances, the vice president becomes the president or merely assumes the "powers and duties" of the presidency. It also fails to define what constitutes inability or how questions concerning inability are to be resolved.<ref name="A2essayPS">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Twenty-fifth Amendment addresses these deficiencies.<ref name="auto1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The ambiguities in ArticleTemplate:NbspII, SectionTemplate:Nbsp1, ClauseTemplate:Nbsp6 of the Constitution regarding death, resignation, removal, or disability of the president created difficulties several times:

File:Tyler Daguerreotype (restoration).jpg
Upon the death of William Henry Harrison, John Tyler (pictured) became the first incumbent vice president to succeed to the presidency.
  • In 1841, William Henry Harrison died in office. It had previously been suggested that the vice president would become acting president upon the president's death,<ref>Chitwood, Oliver. John Tyler: Champion of the Old South. American Political Biography Press, 1990, p. 206</ref> but Vice President John Tyler asserted that he had succeeded to the presidency, instead of merely assuming its powers and duties; he also declined to acknowledge documents referring to him as "acting president". Although Tyler felt his vice presidential oath obviated any need for the presidential oath, he was persuaded that being formally sworn in would resolve any doubts. Accordingly, he took the oath and title of "President", without any qualifiers, moved into the White House, and assumed full presidential powers. Though Tyler was sometimes derided as "His Accidency",<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> both houses of Congress adopted a resolution confirming that he was president. The "Tyler precedent" of succession was thus established,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and subsequently Vice Presidents Millard Fillmore (1850), Andrew Johnson (1865), Chester A. Arthur (1881), Theodore Roosevelt (1901), Calvin Coolidge (1923), Harry S. Truman (1945), and Lyndon B. Johnson (1963) were all deemed to have become president on the death of incumbent presidents.Template:R

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> By the time Wilson's condition became public knowledge, only a few months remained in his term and Congressional leaders were disinclined to press the issue.Template:R

  • Up to 1967, the office of vice president had become vacant 16 times when the vice president died, resigned, or succeeded to the presidency.<ref name=NCC25th>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> The vacancy created when Andrew Johnson succeeded to the presidency upon Abraham Lincoln's assassination was one of several that encompassed nearly an entire four-year term. In 1868, Johnson was impeached by the House of Representatives and came one vote short of being removed from office by the Senate in his impeachment trial. Had Johnson been removed, President pro tempore Benjamin Wade would have become acting president in accordance with the Presidential Succession Act of 1792.<ref name=ARA1995VDA>Template:Cite journal</ref>

  • After several periods of incapacity due to severe health problems, President Dwight D. Eisenhower attempted to clarify procedures through a signed agreement with Vice President Richard Nixon, drafted by Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., but this agreement had no legal authority.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Eisenhower suffered a heart attack in September 1955 and intestinal problems requiring emergency surgery in July 1956. Each time, until Eisenhower was able to resume his duties, Nixon presided over Cabinet meetings and, along with Eisenhower aides, kept the executive branch functioning and assured the public the situation was under control. But Nixon refused to use the president's White House office or sit in the president's chair at Cabinet meetings.Template:R The 1951 novel The Caine Mutiny and its 1954 film version influenced the amendment's drafters. John D. Feerick told The Washington Post in 2018 that the film was a "live depiction" of the type of crisis that could arise "if a president ever faced questions about physical or mental inabilities but disagreed completely with the judgment", a situation the Constitution did not address. Lawmakers drafting the amendment intentionally omitted any wording that could be exploited by the vice president or other officials to depose the president merely by saying that he was "disabled", as the crew in the novel did to Captain Queeg.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Proposal, enactment, and ratificationEdit

Keating–Kefauver proposalEdit

In 1963, Senator Kenneth Keating of New York proposed a Constitutional amendment that would have enabled Congress to enact legislation providing for how to determine when a president is unable to discharge the powers and duties of the presidency, rather than, as the Twenty-fifth Amendment does, having the Constitution so provide.Template:R This proposal was based upon a recommendation of the American Bar Association in 1960.Template:R

The text of the proposal read:Template:R Template:Quote

Senators raised concerns that the Congress could either abuse such authorityTemplate:R or neglect to enact any such legislation after the adoption of this proposal.Template:R Tennessee senator Estes Kefauver, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Constitutional Amendments, a longtime advocate for addressing the disability question, spearheaded the effort until he died in August 1963.Template:R Keating was defeated in the 1964 election, but Senator Roman Hruska of Nebraska took up Keating's cause as a new member of the Subcommittee on Constitutional Amendments.<ref name=":0" />

Kennedy assassinationEdit

By the 1960s, medical advances had made it increasingly plausible that an injured or ill president might live a long time while incapacitated. The assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963 underscored the need for a clear procedure for determining presidential disability,<ref name=79999avb>How JFK's assassination led to a constitutional amendment Template:Webarchive, National Constitution Center, Accessed January 6, 2013</ref> particularly since the new president, Lyndon B. Johnson, had once suffered a heart attack<ref>What is the 25th Amendment and When Has It Been Invoked? History News Network, Accessed January 6, 2013</ref> and—with the office of vice president to remain vacant until the next term began on January 20, 1965—the next two people in the line of succession were the 71-year-old speaker of the House, John McCormack,<ref name=79999avb /> and the 86-year-old Senate president pro tempore, Carl Hayden.<ref name=79999avb /><ref name=lbjsuccess>Presidential Succession During the Johnson Administration Template:Webarchive LBJ Library, Accessed January 6, 2014</ref> Senator Birch Bayh succeeded Kefauver as chairman of the Subcommittee on Constitutional Amendments and set about advocating a detailed amendment dealing with presidential disability.<ref name=79999avb />

Bayh–Celler proposalEdit

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On January 6, 1965, Senator Birch Bayh proposed S.J. Res.Template:Nbsp1 in the Senate and Representative Emanuel Celler (Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee) proposed H.J. Res.Template:Nbsp1 in the House of Representatives. Their proposal specified the process by which a president could be declared "unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office", thereby making the vice president an acting president, and how the president could regain the powers of his office. Their proposal also provided a way to fill a vacancy in the office of vice president before the next presidential election. This was as opposed to the Keating–Kefauver proposal, which provided neither for filling a vacancy in the office of vice president before the next presidential election nor a process for determining presidential disability. In 1964, the American Bar Association endorsed the type of proposal Bayh and Celler advocated.Template:R On January 28, 1965, President Johnson endorsed S.J. Res.Template:Nbsp1 in a statement to Congress.<ref name=":0" /> The proposal received bipartisan support.Template:R

On February 19, the Senate passed the amendment, but the House passed a different version of the amendment on AprilTemplate:Nbsp13. On AprilTemplate:Nbsp22 it was returned to the Senate with revisions.<ref name=":0" /> There were four areas of disagreement between the House and Senate versions:

  • the Senate official who was to receive any written declaration under the amendment;
  • the period of time during which the vice president and principal officers of the executive departments must decide whether they disagree with the president's declaration that he is fit to resume the duties of the presidency;
  • the time before Congress meets to resolve the issue;
  • the time limit for Congress to reach a decision.<ref name=":0" />

On July 6, after a conference committee ironed out differences between the versions,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the amendment's final version passed both houses of Congress and was presented to the states for ratification.Template:NoteTagTemplate:R

RatificationEdit

Nebraska was the first state to ratify the amendment, on JulyTemplate:Nbsp12, 1965, and ratification became complete when Nevada became the 38th state to ratify it, on FebruaryTemplate:Nbsp10, 1967.Template:NoteTag

When President Lyndon B. Johnson underwent planned surgery in 1965, he was unable to temporarily transfer power to Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey because the amendment's ratification remained incomplete. On FebruaryTemplate:Nbsp23, 1967, at the White House ceremony certifying the ratification, Johnson said: Template:Quote

InvocationsEdit

Sections 1 and 2: Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Nelson RockefellerEdit

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On October 10, 1973, Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned, following a controversy over his personal taxes; two days later, President Richard Nixon nominated Representative Gerald Ford to replace Agnew as vice president pursuant to SectionTemplate:Nbsp2. Ford was confirmed by the Senate and the House on NovemberTemplate:Nbsp27 and DecemberTemplate:Nbsp6, respectively, and sworn in on DecemberTemplate:Nbsp6.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

On August 9, 1974, Nixon resigned due to the Watergate scandal and Ford became president under SectionTemplate:Nbsp1, the only president never to have been elected to either the presidency or the vice presidency.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The office of vice president was thus again vacant, and on AugustTemplate:Nbsp20 Ford nominated former New York governor Nelson Rockefeller.Template:R Rockefeller was confirmed by the Senate and the House on December 10 and 19, respectively, and sworn in on December 19.Template:R

Feerick writes that the Twenty-fifth Amendment helped pave the way for Nixon's resignation during the Watergate scandal. Nixon and Agnew were Republicans, and in the months immediately following Agnew's resignation, with the vice presidency empty, Nixon's removal or resignation would have transferred the presidential powers to House Speaker Carl Albert, a Democrat. But once Ford, a Republican, became vice president under Section 2, Nixon's removal became more palatable because it would not change the party holding the presidency, and therefore "the momentum for exposing the truth about Nixon's involvement in Watergate increased".Template:HspTemplate:R

Section 3Edit

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On December 22, 1978, President Jimmy Carter considered invoking SectionTemplate:Nbsp3 in advance of hemorrhoid surgery.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Since then, presidents Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump also contemplated invoking SectionTemplate:Nbsp3 at various times without doing so.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

1985: Ronald Reagan - George H. W. Bush as acting presidentEdit

On July 12, 1985, President Ronald Reagan underwent a colonoscopy and was diagnosed with bowel cancer. He elected to have the lesion removed immediately,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and consulted with White House counsel Fred Fielding about whether to invoke SectionTemplate:Nbsp3, and in particular about whether doing so would set an undesirable precedent. Fielding and White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan recommended that Reagan transfer power, and two letters were drafted: one specifically invoking SectionTemplate:Nbsp3, the other mentioning only that Reagan was mindful of its provisions. On July 13, Reagan signed the letter mentioning that he was mindful of Section 3<ref name="amendment25.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> before being placed under general anesthesia for a colectomy,<ref name="Sorensen">Template:Cite journal</ref> and Vice President George H. W. Bush was acting president from 11:28 a.m. until 7:22 pm, when Reagan transmitted a letter declaring himself able to resume his duties.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In the Fordham Law Review, commentator John Feerick asserted that although Reagan disclaimed any use of the Twenty-fifth Amendment in his letter (likely out of "fear of the reaction of the country and the world to a 'President' who admitted to being disabled, and concern ... [over] set[ting] a harmful precedent"), he followed the process set forth in SectionTemplate:Nbsp3. Furthermore, Feerick noted that "no constitutional provision except the Twenty-Fifth Amendment would have allowed" him to designate the vice president as acting president. Reagan later wrote in a memoir that he had, in fact, invoked the Twenty-fifth Amendment.<ref name="Feerick">Template:Cite journal</ref>

2002 and 2007: George W. Bush - Dick Cheney as acting presidentEdit

On June 29, 2002, President George W. Bush explicitly invoked SectionTemplate:Nbsp3 in temporarily transferring his powers to Vice President Dick Cheney before undergoing a colonoscopy, which began at 7:09 am. Bush awoke about forty minutes later, but refrained from resuming his presidential powers until 9:24 a.m. to ensure that no aftereffects remained.<ref name="amendment25.com" /><ref name=Allen>Template:Cite news</ref> According to his staff, Cheney (as acting president) held his regular national security and homeland security meetings with aides at the White House, but made no appearances and took no recorded actions while acting president.<ref name=Allen />

On July 21, 2007, Bush invoked SectionTemplate:Nbsp3 before another colonoscopy. Cheney was acting president from 7:16 a.m. until 9:21 am.<ref name="amendment25.com" /> During that time, Cheney remained at home.<ref name=Gustafson /> Neither invocation received much attention in the press.<ref name=Gustafson />

In the view of commentator Adam Gustafson, George W. Bush's unambiguous application of SectionTemplate:Nbsp3 "rectified" President Reagan's "ambivalent invocation" and provided an example of a "smooth and temporary transition" under SectionTemplate:Nbsp3 that paved the way for future applications. The two invocations established the reasonableness of invocation for relatively minor inabilities, promoting continuity in the Executive Branch.<ref name=Gustafson>Template:Cite journal</ref>

2021: Joe Biden - Kamala Harris as acting presidentEdit

On November 19, 2021, President Joe Biden temporarily transferred his powers and duties to Vice President Kamala Harris before undergoing a colonoscopy, making her acting president from 10:10 a.m. until 11:35 a.m. This is the first time a woman held the powers and duties of the president of the United States.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Section 4Edit

Section 4 has never been invoked.

Considered invocations of Section 4Edit

1981: Reagan assassination attemptEdit

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Following the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan on MarchTemplate:Nbsp30, 1981, Vice President George H. W. Bush did not assume the presidential powers and duties as acting president. Reagan had been rushed into surgery with no opportunity to invoke SectionTemplate:Nbsp3; Bush did not invoke SectionTemplate:Nbsp4 because he was on a plane at the time of the shooting, and Reagan was out of surgery by the time Bush landed in Washington.<ref name="king010330">Baker, James (speaker)."Remembering the Assassination Attempt on Ronald Reagan Template:Webarchive". Larry King Live, March 30, 2001.</ref> In 1995, Birch Bayh, the primary sponsor of the amendment in the Senate, wrote that SectionTemplate:Nbsp4 should have been invoked.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Physician to the President Daniel Ruge, who supervised Reagan's treatment immediately after the shooting, said he had erred by not having Reagan invoke SectionTemplate:Nbsp3 because Reagan needed general anesthesia and was in an intensive care unit.<ref name="altman20050906">Template:Cite news</ref>

2021: Trump and the Capitol attackEdit

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After the January 6 United States Capitol attack, President Donald Trump was accused of having incited the incident,<ref name="Lieu25">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and by evening some of his Cabinet members were reportedly considering trying to get Vice President Mike Pence to agree to invoke SectionTemplate:Nbsp4.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to multiple sources, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was reluctant to impeach Trump a second time and, as an alternative disciplinary measure, asked Pence to agree to invoke the 25th Amendment in early 2021. Pence refused.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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