US bureaucracy has a paranoia about one person or group being in charge of more than one thing. So, all decisions and appointments must be approved by two or three different groups or individuals before they are confirmed.
Checks and balances!
checks and balances
The senate must confirm all major appointments of the President before they can take effect. This includes the cabinet secretaries, ambassadors and federal judges.
The power to make treaties and confirm the presidents appointments
The President's nominations for cabinet posts are vetted by the US Senate which has the power to reject them if they wish.
The US Senate has to confirm the important appointments, such as cabinet members and ambassadors.
The Senate (Legislative branch) votes to confirm or reject the Presidents' (Executive branch) US Supreme Court (Judicial branch) nominees. Approval requires a simple majority of the Senators voting.Some people believe this power falls to Congress; however, "Congress" is a collective term that includes the House of Representatives, which has no voice in the Supreme Court selection process.Article 2, Section 2, Paragraph 2 (nomination clause) of the US Constitution provides that the President may nominate members of the Supreme Court, but that appointment only occurs with the "advice and consent" of the Senate.
The US President suggests an appointment to the Senate and the Senate confirms the appointee with a two-thirds vote. If the appointee cannot get Senate confirmation, the President will usually rescind the appointment and try to appoint someone more to the Senate's liking.
The Senate has the 'confirmation power', they confirm or deny all of the presidents appointments (cabinet, judicial, ambassador). The senate's confirmation power the senate shares with the president the responsibility for filling many high-level government positions.
The current President Obama made an agreement with the Iraq which the Senate would be very unlikely to confirm. Treaties must confirmed by the Senate, so he opted for an executive order.
There were 25 US presidents who never served in the Senate.
with the Senate
The group responsible for approving all presidential appointments is the United States Senate, specifically the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. They have the authority to review and confirm or reject the individuals nominated by the President for various government positions.
Senate