🏠 Home Detailed notes US presidency walk-through All judgement grids

How to use this

Two grids on the same template. The first is empty - print it, fill in each cell with a one-line note while you revise. The second is a worked example to check yourself against.

Each cell asks one question: does this row strengthen the column quality (mark +) or weaken it (mark -)? Then add a one-line note saying why. The plus and minus columns are deliberately not pre-printed - your judgement is the work.

Constitutional basis = is the check written into the constitutional design? Bit recently = has this check actually constrained a recent president? Depends on party control = does the check only work under divided government? Checks domestic power = does it constrain the president at home? Checks foreign policy = does it constrain the president abroad? President can bypass = can the president work around this check? Effective overall = your overall judgement on this check.

Checks on the US President - judgement grid +   -

Empty version. Print and fill in.
Check+   - Constitutional basis Bit recently Depends on party control Checks domestic power Checks foreign policy President can bypass Effective overall
Congress:
legislation
+ the purse
Impeachment
Supreme
Court
Federalism
and the states
Midterms +
public opinion
War powers
How to use the grid in an essay. Pick the column the question is asking about (checks questions turn on Bit recently, Depends on party control, or President can bypass). Read down that column and group paragraphs by the cluster it produces. The strongest answers distinguish domestic checks (real) from foreign-policy checks (weak) - two columns on this grid do that work for you.

Checks on the US President - judgement grid +   -

Filled version. Use this to check your own grid - and tap any cell for the full detail behind the judgement.
Check+   - Constitutional basis Bit recently Depends on party control Checks domestic power Checks foreign policy President can bypass Effective overall
Congress:
legislation
+ the purse
+Article I: all legislative power and the purse. +Obama's agenda hit a wall after the 2010 midterms. +Unified government passes; divided government blocks. +Lasting domestic change needs statute and money. -Funding wars is politically hard to refuse once troops deploy. +The pen-and-phone presidency - DACA, climate rules, Paris - until the next president reverses it. +The strongest check - when the votes are there.
Impeachment +The Constitution's removal mechanism - House impeaches, Senate tries. -Two impeachments of Trump 1, two acquittals on party lines. +Conviction needs two-thirds of the Senate - impossible without the president's own party. -A deterrent at most. -The Ukraine impeachment was foreign-policy conduct - and failed. -Cannot be bypassed, only survived. -A partisan formality in a polarised Senate.
Supreme
Court
+Judicial review - the Court polices executive action. +Executive orders from both parties blocked in the courts. +Appointments politics decides how hard the check bites. +Orders and agency action regularly halted. -Courts defer heavily on national security. -Rulings bind - but a president picks the future Court. +Real - and increasingly shaped by the presidents it checks.
Federalism
and the states
+The 10th Amendment reserves powers to the states. +Sanctuary-city resistance in both Trump terms; red-state resistance under Biden. +Resistance maps onto which party holds the statehouse. +States can refuse cooperation and set divergent policy. -No state role abroad. +Funding conditions pressure states - the federal lever is money. +A growing check in a polarised federation.
Midterms +
public opinion
-No constitutional text - pure politics. +2010 transformed the Obama presidency overnight. -Works regardless of party - the out-party usually gains. +A lost chamber ends the legislative presidency. -Voters rarely vote on foreign policy. -No president has found a way around the calendar. +The most reliable check in the system.
War powers +Congress declares war; the 1973 Resolution adds reporting rules. -Routinely ignored - the June 2025 Iran strikes the latest case. +Congress objects loudly only to the other party's wars. -Not a domestic check. -The clearest failure: presidents conduct war on their own authority. +Notification and finesse substitute for authorisation. -The weakest check on the grid.
What the filled grid shows. Read down the columns. Depends on party control is plus almost everywhere - the checks are partisan switches, on under divided government, off under unified government. Checks foreign policy is minus almost everywhere - the War Powers Resolution is routinely finessed and the imperial-presidency case lives abroad. The judgement line: the framers built checks that still bite domestically when party control splits, and barely bite at all on a president acting overseas.
See also