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Old 10-22-2008, 03:46 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cincibuck View Post
But Palin has revealed that she has no idea what the job entails apart from some super sorter determining which is real and which is un-real America. To credit her with any sort of political philosophical depth would seem to me to be a rather large leap in faith.
I didn't realize I was crediting her or not crediting her with any philosophical depth to her response. I was just saying her response falls in line (whether intentional or not) with the practices of Adams. Whether Adams' appraoch is appropriate or not today is another question, but what I was trying to show is there is at least one, if not two, precedents that exist for a much more involved VP in Senate affairs and that such an interpretation is certainly within the bounds of the Constitution (i.e. it is a legislative, not an executive position).

My purpose for the post was more to counter what I thought I saw from some posters on here who naturally assumed that the VP is exclusively an executive position with only tie-breaking legislative authority. Although that may have been normal practice in modern times, it was not the original intent of the position; and therefore from a Constitutional perspective, it can easily be argued that it is a legislative position.

As for Adams and Jefferson being elected on there own, and current VPs not, I thought I addressed that.

Last edited by buckeyegrad; 10-22-2008 at 04:16 PM.
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