Executive Order Vs Puente Government

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Executive Orders serve to clarify the Constitution and the powers allocated to each officer, and, while these Executive Orders rarely decide upon the powers of the President, it is imperative for the President to clarify its own powers - lest it steps on the toes of another office. Therefore, this Executive Order will clarify and bind the powers and responsibilities of the President. Foremost, the President is invested with numerous powers, but at the very forefront of the President’s powers is the power to execute the Constitution. The basic agreement of the people is that the President will execute the Constitution in its entirety. However, there often becomes cases where such is not recommended - times where parts of the Constitution must …show more content…

The President must work with all officers not campaigning for another office to agree on common terms for the upcoming elections before the beginning of the election cycle. Moving on, the President is also barred from campaigning for another office as it goes against the reputation of the office. The Office of the President of the Puente Program and Club is at the utmost pinnacle of the Puente Government, and, therefore, all occupants of that office may not hold, in the future, any other office in the Puente Government. After completing the two-year term granted to an elected President, the only option granted to the President is retirement from the Puente …show more content…

The denial of any of these powers to the President is unconstitutional, and, therefore, it may result in the collapse of the Constitution as a whole. If at any of these powers are denied to the President at any time by any body of government or individual, then and only then the President can issue a writ of supposita virtute - a document giving the President the complete powers of all branches of government for no longer than three days. In these three days, the President is obligated to secure all four powers to his office, and, furthermore, the President is required to, by the same writ that he assumed power, to give all assumed powers back to their rightful and constitutional owners. It must be noted and honored, however, that the writ of supposita virtute may not be, in any case, issued more than one time by any President. Any subsequent writ of supposita virtute is null and void after it has been issued once by any President. In common terms, the President is limited to one writ of supposita virtute per

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