THE PRESIDENT and the Vice President have agreed to adhere
to procedures identical to those which former President Eisenhower and
Vice President Nixon adopted with regard to any questions of Presidential
inability. Those procedures are as follows:
(1) In the event of inability
the President would - if possible - so inform the Vice President, and the
Vice President would serve as Acting President, exercising the powers and
duties of the Office until the inability had ended.
(2) In the event of an inability
which would prevent the President from so communicating with the Vice President,
the Vice President, after such consultation as seems to him appropriate
under the circumstances, would decide upon the devolution of the powers
and duties of the Office and would serve as Acting President until the
inability had ended.
(3) The President, in either
event, would determine when the inability had ended and at that time would
resume the full exercise of the powers and duties of the Office.
After consultation with the
Attorney General, it is the understanding of the President and the Vice
President that these procedures reflect the correct interpretation to be
given to Article II, Section 1, clause 5 of the Constitution. This was
also the view of the prior Administration and is supported by the great
majority of constitutional scholars.
The relevant constitutional
provision is:
"In Case of the Removal of the
President from Office, or of his Death, Resignation, or Inability to discharge
the Powers and Duties of the said Office, the same shall devolve on the
Vice President, and the Congress may by Law provide for the Case of Removal,
Death, Resignation or Inability, both of the President and Vice President,
declaring what Officer shall then act as President, and such Officer shall
act accordingly, until the Disability be removed, or a President shall
be elected."
Under this provision, upon a
proper determination of Presidential inability, the Vice President succeeds
temporarily to the powers and duties of the Presidency until such time
as the President is enabled to act again. Unlike the case of removal, death,
or resignation, the Vice President does not permanently become President.
Under the arrangement quoted
above, the Vice President agrees to serve as Acting President "after such
consultation as seems to him appropriate under the circumstances." There
is no provision of the Constitution or of law prescribing any procedure
of consultation, but the President and Vice President felt, as a matter
of wisdom and sound judgment, that the Vice President would wish to have
the support of the Cabinet as to the necessity and desirability of discharging
the powers and duties of the Presidency as Acting President as well as
legal advice from the Attorney General that the circumstances would, under
the Constitution, justify his doing so. The understanding between the President
and the Vice President authorizes the Vice President to consult with these
officials with a free mind that this is what the President intended in
the event of a crisis.
Prior to the Eisenhower-Nixon
arrangement, there were no similar understandings of a public nature. For
this reason, prior Vice Presidents have hesitated to take any initiative
during the period when the President was disabled. Obviously, this is a
risk which cannot be taken in these times, and it is for that reason that
President Kennedy and Vice President Johnson have agreed to follow the
precedent established by the past Administration.