2,201 research outputs found
The Presidential Succession Act at 75 | Proposals to Reform the 1947 Act and How Reform Could Be Effectuated
These remarks were delivered as part of the program entitled The Presidential Succession Act at 75: Praise It or Bury It?, which was held on April 6, 2022, and hosted by the Fordham University School of Law. The Presidential Succession Act sets out the presidential line of succession and other procedures for situations in which the president and vice president have both died, resigned, been removed, or become unable to discharge the presidency’s powers and duties. The Act also addresses succession scenarios before Inauguration Day. In light of the statute’s seventy-fifth anniversary, this program explored relevant history and analyzed whether reform to the statute is needed.
In these remarks, Dr. John C. Fortier, a Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and the Executive Director of the Continuity of Government Commission, discusses possible reforms to the Presidential Succession Act of 1947 and some of the challenges of accomplishing reform
Theoretical models of planetary system formation: mass vs semi-major axis
Planet formation models have been developed during the last years in order to
try to reproduce the observations of both the solar system, and the extrasolar
planets. Some of these models have partially succeeded, focussing however on
massive planets, and for the sake of simplicity excluding planets belonging to
planetary systems. However, more and more planets are now found in planetary
systems. This tendency, which is a result of both radial velocity, transit and
direct imaging surveys, seems to be even more pronounced for low mass planets.
These new observations require the improvement of planet formation models,
including new physics, and considering the formation of systems. In a recent
series of papers, we have presented some improvements in the physics of our
models, focussing in particular on the internal structure of forming planets,
and on the computation of the excitation state of planetesimals, and their
resulting accretion rate. In this paper, we focus on the concurrent effect of
the formation of more than one planet in the same protoplanetary disc, and show
the effect, in terms of global architecture and composition of this
multiplicity. We use a N-body calculation including collision detection to
compute the orbital evolution of a planetary system. Moreover, we describe the
effect of competition for accretion of gas and solids, as well as the effect of
gravitational interactions between planets. We show that the masses and
semi-major axis of planets are modified by both the effect of competition and
gravitational interactions. We also present the effect of the assumed number of
forming planets in the same system (a free parameter of the model), as well as
the effect of the inclination and eccentricity damping.Comment: accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Continuity of Government: Presidential Succession
Questions about the continuity of our key institutions have arisen at pivotal moments throughout our nation's history. Watershed events such as the Cold War, the death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy brought continuity-of-government issues into sharp public relief. Ultimately, these events led to significant reforms, including the 25th Amendment and a new Presidential Succession Act.A decade after the fall of the Soviet Union, the 9/11 attacks forced continuity issues back into the public consciousness. One result was the creation of the first Continuity of Government Commission, the predecessor to the current commission. More than two decades after 9/11, we still have to ask ourselves, Do we have the legal and constitutional framework in place to ensure that our key institutions of government could recover from a catastrophic event?America has in place legal and constitutional provisions that address presidential succession. These provisions serve us well in the straightforward case of a president's death while in office. However, the current system does not adequately address less straightforward scenarios, such as a mass attack on multiple people in the line of succession, the simultaneous incapacity of the president and vice president, and unique succession issues that could arise between Election Day and Inauguration Day.In this report, the Continuity of Government Commission recommends several changes to the Presidential Succession Act that address these vulnerabilities. These recommendations would not require constitutional amendments; they are achievable through simple legislative changes
The Absentee Ballot and the Secret Ballot: Challenges for Election Reform
Reforms in the recently enacted federal election reform legislation primarily address improving voting at a polling place, but there is a growing share of the electorate who vote away from the polling place through increased use of absentee ballots and vote-by-mail systems. Voters who vote away from the polling place do not have the same protections as those at the polling place. In particular, these voters do not have a secret ballot, as any ballot cast without a drawn curtain behind oneself is potentially subject to coercion, vote buying and fraud.
This Article looks at the tension between the Australian Ballot and absentee voting. Both the Australian Ballot and the Absentee Ballot were electoral reforms of previous generations. The Australian Ballot was instituted by almost all of the states in the 1880s and 90s to combat abuses at the ballot box such as vote buying and coercion by party machines. There were two major periods of absentee ballot reform. In both periods of absentee ballot reform, there was recognition of the dangers of casting a ballot away from a home polling place. Since these early periods of adoption of absentee voting laws, there has been a significant rise in voting away from the polling place. In addition, many of the safeguards implemented by early legislation have been repealed. There are a number of advocates for easier absentee balloting, vote by mail, or even voting over the Internet. Although they emphasize the convenience of such measures, these advocates do not seem to appreciate the privacy concerns that the originators of the absentee ballot did. 7b the extent that election reform legislation is to be successful in improving the electoral system, it must take note of the trend toward voting away from the polling place and consider the importance of the secret ballot as well as convenience
The Continuity of Congress
The Continuity of Government Commission was originally formed after 9/11 to address how our key institutions can reconstitute themselves after a catastrophic attack. A new version of the commission, including previous members and new ones, who have experience in all three branches of government, met in 2021 and 2022 to consider continuity-of-government issues in light of the recent pandemic and other developments. In this report, the commission issues its recommendations on the continuity of Congress.The core continuity problem for Congress is that if many members of the House of Representatives were killed in an attack or other catastrophe, the House would likely have no quorum and be unable to meet for months after the event. Unlike the Senate, the House can fill its vacancies only by special election, and those elections are likely to take months to conduct.The key recommendation is for a constitutional amendment to allow for temporary replacements to be appointed to fill the seats of deceased members until special elections are held to elect a permanent replacement. With immediate successors to fill the seats of deceased members of Congress, a Congress with nearly full representation could be reconstituted within days to work with the president to face the challenges of the present emergency.The commission makes several other recommendations that deal with other continuity-of-Congress issues:Creating a limited provision for allowing remote proceedings when members of Congress cannot meet in person in Washington,Allowing temporary replacement members to fill in for incapacitated members in the extreme case when deceased and incapacitated members number more than a majority of the House or Senate, andAdopting procedures to ensure that a new Congress could commence, perhaps even remotely, if a catastrophic emergency prevented the regular opening of a new Congress
Lessons Learned From the 2020 Election
The 2020 primaries and presidential election took place against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic, which necessitated changes to how states planned and held their elections, and how they protected voters, poll workers, and administrators.From political and institutional battles over procedural changes, to record-high turnout levels, administering elections in 2020 proved to be a series of anticipated — and unanticipated — challenges. Surges in voting by mail meant many states were breaking new ground; maintaining access to in-person voting also proved uniquely challenging during a global pandemic. Our new report looks at how well the challenges of 2020 were met, from the first primary election to the last vote counted. It also examines the technologies employed, the costs involved in running elections, and the confidence voters ultimately had in the results
Measurement of excited-state transitions in cold calcium atoms by direct femtosecond frequency-comb spectroscopy
We apply direct frequency-comb spectroscopy, in combination with precision cw
spectroscopy, to measure the transition
frequency in cold calcium atoms. A 657 nm ultrastable cw laser was used to
excite atoms on the narrow ( Hz) clock transition, and the direct output of the frequency comb was
used to excite those atoms from the state to the state. The resonance of this second stage was detected by observing a
decrease in population of the ground state as a result of atoms being optically
pumped to the metastable states. The transition frequency is measured to be kHz; which is an improvement by almost four orders of magnitude over
the previously measured value. In addition, we demonstrate spectroscopy on
magnetically trapped atoms in the state.Comment: 4 pages 5 figure
Efficient 1 GHz Ti:sapphire laser with improved broadband continuum in the infrared
We demonstrate a 1 GHz prismless femtosecond Ti:sapphire ring laser which
emits 890 mW for 7.6W of pump power over a continuum extending from 585 to 1200
nm at -20 dB below the maximum. A broadband continuum is obtained without
careful mirror dispersion compensation, with the net cavity
group-delay-dispersion having -50 to +100 fs2 oscillations from 700 to 900 nm.
Further broadening is obtained by use of a slightly convex cavity mirror that
increases self-phase modulation. 17% (75%) of the intracavity (output) power is
generated in single-pass through the crystal, outside the cavity bandwidth and
concentrated in the low gain infrared region from 960 to 1200 nm. This laser
seems well suited for optical frequency metrology, possibly allowing easier
stabilization of the carrier-to-envelope offset frequency without use of
photonic fibers
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