The Balance of Power between the Legislative and Executive Branches
70 min
Objectives
- Students will evaluate how the growth of an administrative state in the United States has affected constitutional principles.
- Students will evaluate the shift of power from the legislative to executive branch in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
- Students will analyze legislation to determine the ways in which it may have increased executive power and will understand the effects of such policies.
Student Handouts
- Handout A: Background Essay – The Balance of Power between the Legislative and Executive Branches
- Handout B: Excerpts from the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887
- Handout C: Excerpts from the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933
- Handout D: Excerpts from the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933
- Handout E: Excerpts from the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964
- Handout F: Comparing Legislation Graphic Organizer
Teacher Resources
- Administrative state
- Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933
- Apothegm
- Bureaucracy
- Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914
- Economic Opportunity Act of 1964
- Enlightened administrator
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
- Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
- Interstate commerce
- Interstate Commerce Act of 1887
- Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)
- Hepburn Act of 1906
- National Industrial Recovery Act of 1934 (NIRA)
- National Recovery Administration (NRA)
- Progressive
- Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States (1935)
- The Jungle by Upton Sinclair (1906)
- War Industries Board
- As homework, have students read Handout A: Background Essay—The Balance of Power Between the Legislative and Executive Branches and answer the questions that follow.
- In class, discuss students’ answers to the questions as a large group and introduce the key terms for the lesson.
- Break students into four groups. Assign each group one of the following pieces of legislation:
- Students will work in groups to complete the column for their specific legislation on Handout F: Comparing Legislation.
- They should then create a visual representation of the legislation by developing a PowerPoint presentation, video, or skit. Each group’s presentation should explain the information on their graphic organizer on Handout F.
- Students should present their visual representation of the legislation to the class. The class should record the information provided in their graphic organizer.
- Briefly discuss how power has shifted from the legislative to executive branch over time and the pros and cons of such changes as a large group.
- Have students research one of the executive agencies that started in the nineteenth, twentieth, or twenty-first centuries and write a brief essay about their findings. The essay should include:
- The legislation or executive order that started the agency. (Is the agency still open? If not, when was it closed and why?)
- The reason for starting the agency.
- The powers of the agency.
- The actions the agency has taken in its history.
- The effects of agency actions on the balance of power between the branches of government.
- Examples of agencies include:
- Food and Drug Administration
- Environmental Protection Agency
- Federal Emergency Management Agency
- Federal Housing Administration
- Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives
- Federal Bureau of Investigation
- United States Customs and Border Protection
- National Recovery Administration
- Interstate Commerce Commission
- Federal Trade Commission
- National Labor Relations Board
- Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
- Works Progress Administration
- A list of additional agencies can be found at https://www.usa.gov/federal-agencies/a