Title 3 of the United States Code
Title 3 of the United States Code outlines the role of the President of the United States in the United States Code.[1]
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Chapter 1—Presidential Elections and Vacancies
This chapter deals with elections for President every four years, and vacancies.
- § 1. Time of appointing electors
- § 2. Failure to make choice on prescribed day
- § 3. Number of electors
- § 4. Vacancies in electoral college
- § 5. Determination of controversy as to appointment of electors
- § 6. Credentials of electors; transmission to Archivist of the United States and to Congress; public inspection
- § 7. Meeting and vote of electors
- § 8. Manner of voting
- § 9. Certificates of votes for President and Vice President
- § 10. Sealing and endorsing certificates
- § 11. Disposition of certificates
- § 12. Failure of certificates of electors to reach President of the Senate or Archivist of the United States; demand on State for certificate
- § 13. Same; demand on district judge for certificate
- § 14. Forfeiture for messenger's neglect of duty
- § 15. Counting electoral votes in Congress
- § 16. Same; seats for officers and Members of two Houses in joint meeting
- § 17. Same; limit of debate in each House
- § 18. Same; parliamentary procedure at joint meeting
- § 19. Vacancy in offices of both President and Vice President; officers eligible to act
- § 20. Resignation or refusal of office
- § 21. Definitions
Chapters 2–5
- Chapter 2: Office and Compensation of President
- Chapter 3: Protection of the President; United States Secret Service Uniformed Division
- Chapter 4: Delegation of Functions
- Chapter 5: Extension of Certain Rights and Protections to Presidential Offices
gollark: Somewhat.
gollark: Eh, it has similar problems.
gollark: The 80% of power back thing pretends the grid is a large battery, when it's *not*, and you'll just be using fossil fuels probably.
gollark: Well, sure. But I don't think it's a good general solution.
gollark: Nuclear is much better, but people go "OH NO NUCLEAR SCARY" and yet seemingly do not care about the alternative effectively being fossil fuels?
References
- "United States Code". Office of the Law Revision Counsel. Retrieved November 21, 2015.
External links
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