The Twenty-fifth Amendment : its complete history and applications / John D. Feerick.
2014
KF5082 .F44 2014 (Map It)
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Author
Title
The Twenty-fifth Amendment : its complete history and applications / John D. Feerick.
Published
New York : Fordham University Press, 2014.
Call Number
KF5082 .F44 2014
Edition
Third edition.
ISBN
9780823252008 (hardback)
0823252000 (hardback)
9780823252015 (paperback)
0823252019 (paperback)
0823252000 (hardback)
9780823252015 (paperback)
0823252019 (paperback)
Description
xxiii, 424 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)845085819
Summary
"This new edition of The Twenty-Fifth Amendment: Its Complete History and Applications updates John Feerick's landmark study with the Amendment's uses in the past twenty years and how those uses (along with new legal scholarship) have changed the Amendment and perceptions of presidential disability in general. In its formulation, the Twenty-fifth Amendment was criticized as vague and undemocratic, but it has made possible swift and orderly successions to the highest offices in the U.S. government during some of the most extraordinary events in American history. The extent of its authority has been tested over the years: During the Watergate crisis, it was proposed that the Amendment might afford a means by which a president could transfer presidential power during an impeachment proceeding, and it was also suggested that the Amendment could authorize a vice president and cabinet to suspend a president during a Senate impeachment trial. Where once presidential disability was stigmatized, today a president under general anesthesia cedes presidential authority for the length of the procedure with little controversy. The Twenty-fifth Amendment is evolving rapidly, and this book is an invaluable guide for legal scholars, government decision makers, historians, political scientists, teachers, and students studying the nation's highest offices."-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 399-414) and index.
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Edith L. Fisch Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Edith L. Fisch Fund
Table of Contents
Introduction / Joel K. Goldstein
ix
Preface to the Third Edition
xiii
Acknowledgments from the 1992 Edition
xvii
Foreword to the 1976 Edition
xix
Preface to the 1976 Edition
xxi
I.
The Problems
1.
Presidential Inability
3
2.
Vice-Presidential Vacancy
25
3.
Succession Beyond the Vice Presidency
33
II.
The Solution
4.
Early Steps to Solve the Inability Problem
49
5.
Senate Passage of S. J. Res.139
56
6.
Congress Acts
79
7.
Ratification
105
8.
An Analysis of Sections 1, 2, 3, and 4 of the Amendment
108
III.
Implementations of the Solution
9.
The Resignation of Spiro T. Agnew
125
10.
The Substitution of Gerald R. Ford
135
11.
The Resignation of Richard M. Nixon and Succession of Gerald R. Ford
158
12.
The Installation of Nelson A. Rockefeller
167
13.
The Uses and Non-Uses of Section 3
190
IV.
Continued Interest and Efforts to Change
14.
Congressional Action
207
15.
Symposia, Scholarship, and Commissions
221
16.
Representation of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment in Popular Culture
254
V.
An Evaluation
17.
Appraisal
265
18.
Recommendations
291
Appendixes
A.
Section-by-Section Development of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment
299
B.
Constitutional Provisions on Succession
306
C.
Statutory Succession Laws
309
D.
Presidential and Vice-Presidential Vacancies
313
E.
Times During Which the Speaker, the President pro tempore, or Both Were from a Party Different from the President's
315
F.
Rule Number 9 of the Republican Party
317
G.
Selected Sections of the Charter and Bylaws of the Democratic Party
318
H.
Letter from President Lyndon B. Johnson to House Speaker John W. McCormack
320
I.
Schedule of Gerald R. Ford for August 9, 1974
338
J.
Twenty-Fifth Amendment Memo Prepared for President Gerald R. Ford
340
Notes
351
Bibliography
399
Index
415