93MarineHorn said:
Quote:
MetoliusAg said:
Actually it does matter. Presidents have an oath of office and Constitutional responsibilities they must uphold and conform to. Presidents have great leeway on foreign policy, choosing ambassadors, etc, but choosing and firing ambassadors isn't an unlimited Presidential power.
I'm sure you've already done it, but now you've "jumped the shark" or whatever term means that you've gone so far you can never come back. You've lost, again.
Not at all. We have a Constitution with three equal branches and numerous checks and balances against abuse of power, and that includes limits on a President's power to select and fire ambassadors:
-- If a President fired an ambassador for any number of illegal reasons (hypothetical example: if a female ambassador refused to have sex with the President's pal, the SecState) or for any number of national security reasons or corrupt reasons (hypothetical example: an ambassador refuses to participate/go along with a corruption or bribery scheme), that action by a POTUS would be a serious violation of the oath of office and should result in impeachment by the HoR followed by Senate removal of the President.
So clearly there are Constitutional limits and consequences on the Presidential powers to choose and fire ambassadors.