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What problems confront a President in controlling and coordinating the executive branch and how successfully have recent Presidents assessed them?  

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What problems confront a President in controlling and coordinating the executive branch and how successfully have recent Presidents assessed them? The President sits at the apex of the executive branch, and is the only member of the branch to be elected. Aside from his administrative officials and advisors, the executive branch of the President is made up of two main areas. The Cabinet and The EXOP. The Cabinet is a body whose members specialise in different areas of American society and aim to represent those areas by making decisions that benefit their supporters. They are appointed and dismissed by the President (whose appointments and dismissals must be approved by Congress). The EXOP (Executive Office Of the President) is made up of members, again specialising in a a certain aspect of society, but this time they represent the President and their views on certain issues, as opposed to having its supporters and...

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