I’m speculating to myself about the role of a President’s family, they might be the first to notice mental deterioration so they could alert the VP or the President’s doctors but there would have to be checks to be sure they weren’t mistaken, malicious or mad themselves.
It’s not really a coincidence. While the 25th Amendment wasn’t enacted by the states until 1967, it had been passed by the Senate in 1965. So Knebel was aware of the proposal (and probably inspired by it) when he wrote his novel.
The President cannot unilaterly order a first nuclear strike, the Secretary of Defence must countersign the order (jointly they form the National Command Authority). Of course the President can simply keep dismissing DoD officials as the next highest ranking officer automatically becomes Acting SecDef and he finds someone who’ll agree with him. :smack:
One major problem with the 25th amendment is that it’s silent on what were to happen if the President & Vice-President were to both become incapacited at the same time, or if the President did while the VP’s office was vacant. What happens then? Does the VP’s role just go to the next-in-line (House Speaker), or can the amendment simply not be invoked without a sitting VP?
Heck, it’s easy to imagine a scenario where Oswald’s aim was slightly off and JFK gets shot in the head but is not instantly killed - merely left in a permanent vegetative state. I presume this possibility was not considered far-fetched to the people who drafted the 25th.
For fictional treatments, there’s also the novel The President’s Plane is Missing, where Air Force One crashes in a storm and President Haines’s body cannot be found. Vice-President Madigan, an otherwise sharply mediocre man, sees a chance at glory and wants to be declared Acting President so he can resolve a growing crisis with China by, well… nuking them.
Oddly, for all the reserch author Robert Serling must have done, he seemed to think there was an actual button in the Oval Office the President (or Acting President) could press to start Armegeddon.
I remember this issue was discussed once in a previous thread and there was a question if an acting Secretary of Defense had the authority to approve a nuclear launch or if it had to be a Secretary of Defense who had been approved in that title by the Senate.
Huh… while looking up other tidbits, I found the wiki article on the Presidential state car (the heavily-modified and reinforced limousine used by the president) and it includes a picture of Obama and Biden riding inside the same vehicle during a motorcade, which I thought was something specifically prohibited by law, i.e. the Prez and Veep travelling in the same conveyance.
In the Wikipedia article about the 25th amendment, there is a passage about Reagan’s alleged incapacity in 1987:
A relevant GQ thread of mine: Two Related Questions about Insane Presidents
And 2.
Palmer wouldn’t authorize a “retaliatory” strike against the nations suspected of planning the nuclear attack on the US, so he’s removed from office by his cabinet…I guess because wanting to wait for all the facts to come in is a sign of mental illness? ![]()
A related question would be: What happens if the President on one occasion consumes way too much alcohol and ends up being completely drunk?
Basically, a President, in every minute during his 4 year tenure, has to be able to make important decisions in a moments notice, being woken up in the middle of the night if necessary.
In 2002, President George W. Bush underwent a colonoscopy. He decided to invoke section 3 of the 25th amendment and thus making Dick Cheney the acting President. The medical procedure itself took only 20 minutes, and GWB re-assumed his duties a little over 2 hours later.
What if a President drank a whole bottle of Whiskey and then is confronted with a devastating national security issue in the magnitude of 9/11?
A Staff Report that may be of interest, written by this guy I know: Is the Secret Service responsible for keeping the president from getting drunk? - The Straight Dope
Wow. One would imagine that the President and commander-in-chief would refrain from drinking at least during a major international crisis.
One would imagine that, but then, perhaps, one would not understand Nixon.