Federal Executive of the United States

The federal administration of the United States, officially the “United States Federal Executive Department” is the ensemble of agencies that constitute, together with the United States Federal Executive Council, the executive branch of the federal Authorities of the United States. Also called “The Fed”, and “FedGov”, the Federal Executive Department is responsible for executing the Laws of the United States, as well as ensuring they are properly executed by the States and Territories.

Federal Executive Council
The Federal Executive Council (FEC) is the group consisting of the Governor-General and the heads of the executive departments of the United States. The Federao Executive Council exists to advise the Governor-General on all Matters relating to their respective portfolios, and the Governor-General presides over the FEC.

The Governor-General nominates and, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, appoints all members of the FEC. If the Senate consent to the Governor-General’s nomination, then the nominee is sworn in and then begin his duties. Aside from the Attorney-General, and the Postmaster-General, all heads of the principal executive departments receive the title of “United States Commissioner for [portfolio]” (informally, “Secretary of [portfolio]”). Members of the Federal Executive Council serve at the pleasure of the Governor-General; the Governor-General may dismiss or reappoint them (to other posts) at will.

The FEC is charged with leading the different sectors of public administration within the federal Government and consists of:

Governor-General


 * Attorney-General
 * Commissioner for State and Foreign Affairs
 * Commissioner for Public Safety
 * Commissioner for Emergency and Military Affairs
 * Commissioner for the Treasury
 * Commissioner for the Territories
 * Commissioner for Administration
 * Postmaster-General

Departments
There are currently seven executive departments and one office; all of them equivalent to that of ministries in parliamentary systems. Each executive department is responsible for a specific sector (portfolio) of public administration and provides a related public service to the several States united and the citizenry of each of them. The current departments are: Office of Governor-General


 * Department of the Attorney-General
 * Department of State and Foreign Affairs
 * Department of Public Safety
 * Department of Emergency and Military Affairs
 * Department of the Treasury
 * Department of the Territories
 * Department of Administration
 * United States Postal Service

Office of Governor-General

 * Website: Portal:Governor-General of the United States

The Governor-General of the United States is the Federal head of government of the United States. The Office of Governor-General is an indirectly-elected Post, by which the Governor-General is formally chosen by an electoral college consisting of a Number of Electors from each State chosen by the Voters thereof, with the Number of Electors from each State being equal to the Number of Senators and Representatives in Congress to which that State is entitled.

As, except where the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for the United States directs otherwise, all executive Power of the United States (the Union) is vested in the Governor-General, the person holding this Office is the head of the Federal Executive Department; and all employees of the executive Department serve at his pleasure.

Article II-C of the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for the United States vests the executive power of the United States in the Governor-General. However, in practice, the Governor-General delegates authority to exercise this Power to his subordinates; that is to say the Heads of Departments, federal executive Agencies, and, most importantly, to the States. Article II-C also establishes that the Governor-General shall be assisted by a Federal Executive Council (FEC) which is composed of the Heads of the principal executive Departments and the FEC-level Officers. The Governor-General is president of the Federal Executive Council.

The United States Federal Government does not have a post for lieutenant governor-general. Instead, the Constitution Treaty (TECUS) prescribes that, “[i]n Case of the Removal of the Governor-General from Office, or of his Death, Resignation, or Absence from the United States, or Inability to discharge the Powers and Duties of the said Office, the Same shall devolve on the President of the Senate” —In other words, as the Governor-General’s lieutenant, whenever the Governor-General is unable to exercise the Powers and Duties of his Office, the President of the Senate is to exercise the Powers and Duties of the Office of Governor-General as Governor-General pro Tempore “until the Disability be removed, or a Governor-General shall be elected and qualified”. The President of the Senate, therefore, performs an equivalent role to that of a Lieutenant Governor in United States politics.

Agencies and offices
 * United States Intergovernmental Conference Secretariat: …
 * White House Office: …
 * White House Military Office: …
 * White House Counsel’s Office: …
 * White House Communication Office: …
 * White House Press Secretary: …
 * White House Medical Unit: …
 * White House Mess: …
 * White House Transport Office: …
 * Executive Airlift Group: …
 * Marine Helicopter Squadron One: …
 * White House Staff Secretary’s Office: …
 * Office of Gubernatorial Correspondence: …
 * Office of Executive Clerk: …
 * Office of Management and Budget: …
 * Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs: …

Department of State and Foreign Affairs

 * Website: Portal:United States Department of State and Foreign Affairs

The Department of State and Foreign Affairs is the Federal-level foreign ministry and intergovernmental affairs ministry of the Government of the United States. In its role as a Federal-level foreign ministry, the Department serves as the common representative of the eighteen States of North Aegea relative to the Common Foreign and International Trade Policy (CFITP). In respect to the Department’s role as a Federal-level intergovernmental affairs ministry, the Department of State and Foreign Affairs essentially operates as a reverse foreign ministry of sorts, whereby relations and communication are directed inwards, focusing on the eighteen member States of the Union &mdash;e.g., Federal-State relations, in a functionally equivalent Manner as the intergovernmental relations between the USKO and its member States. The Department is also responsible for coordinating the efforts of the several States in implementing the CFITP.

The Department of State and Foreign Affairs is headed by a Commissioner for State and Foreign Affairs, usually shortened as “Secretary of State”, and sometimes referred to as the “Secretary-General of the United States”, who is the “the principal assistant to the Governor-General in all matters relating to the Department of State and Foreign Affairs.” Agencies and offices
 * Division of State Affairs: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Arizona: …
 * United States Minister to the State of California: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Colorado: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Hawaiʻi: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Idaho: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Kansas: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Montana: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Nebraska: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Nevada: …
 * United States Minister to the State of New Mexico: …
 * United States Minister to the State of North Dakota: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Oklahoma: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Oregon: …
 * United States Minister to the State of South Dakota: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Texas: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Utah: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Washington: …
 * United States Minister to the State of Wyoming: …
 * Division of Foreign Affairs: …
 * Office of Public International Law: …
 * Office of Private International Law: …
 * All-Union Agency for Development and Cooperation: …
 * Protocol Office: …
 * Integration Office: …
 * Office of Consular Affairs: …
 * Office of Foreign Missions: …
 * United States Information Office: …
 * Division of Clerical Affairs: …
 * Federal Archives and Records Agency: …
 * Office of the Federal Register: …

Department of the Attorney-General

 * Website: Portal:United States Department of the Attorney-General

The Department of the Attorney-General is an Department of the United States Federal Executive, responsible for interpreting the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for the United States and Federal Law in the form of Attorney-General Opinions, which have the force of Law unless and until reversed, either by the United States Federal Court, by the United States Federal Council (configured as a convention of State attorneys-general and the Federal attorney-general), or by the Judicial Committee of the Federal Council (a convention of State supreme Courts and the federal Court); and serving as the legal counsel for the Government of the United States. Other responsibilities of the Department include monitoring State-enforcement of Federal Law, advising States on Matters relative to enforcing Federal Law, and representing the United States in the Federal Court and also in the Courts of the various States whenever there arises a question of Federal Law, or the United States Government (or an officer or employee thereof) is a Party.

The Attorney-General is the “the principal assistant to the Governor-General in all matters relating to Federal Law and the Department of the Attorney-General,” and mainly serves as the legal counsel to the Federal Executive and the various Branches, Departments, Agencies, and Offices thereof. In addition, the head of the Department, the Attorney-General of the United States, represents the General Government before the Federal Court of the United States, and occasionally in State-level Courts in Causes (Cases) involving federal Officers or Questions of Federal law. However, in most Cases involving a Cause arising in a State-level Court that involves the United States, or an Officer thereof, or a Federal-question, the General Government is usually represented in Court by the Advocate-General in and for that State, or his deputy. The Department, by Law, also monitors the States’ in their enforcement of Union (Federal) law, including their prosecuting of violations of Federal law; and regularly offers nonbinding guidance to State attorneys-general on Matters relative to their State’s enforcement of Union law. Agencies and offices
 * Office of Attorney-General: …
 * Office of Solicitor-General: …
 * United States Advocates-General’s Office: …

Department of Public Safety

 * Website: Portal:United States Department of Public Safety

The Department of Public Safety is the department of the United States Federal Executive with responsibility for protecting the United States and their respective peoples from external and interstate threats; as well as coordinating border and maritime Security, Customs, and Immigration enforcement efforts of the several States; and also responsible for the United States’ (federal) domestic and foreign Intelligence and counterterrorism Efforts. However, under the Treaty Establishing a Constitution for the United States, federal Intelligence and other public safety Agencies, their Officers and Employees, are forbidden from carrying Weapons as part of their Duties while within the United States, and are further prohibited from arresting or detaining Persons: Instead, federal Intelligence and federal public safety Agencies may only collect Intelligence, Investigate, and Observe; and then forward their findings and recommendations to State-level law Enforcement and Prosecutors.

The Department of Public Safety is headed by a Commissioner for Public Safety, sometimes referred to as the “Sheriff-General of the United States”, who is the “the principal assistant to the Governor-General in all matters relating to the Department of Public Safety.”

The Fœderal Bureau of Intelligence (external intelligence) and the Fœderal Security Bureau (domestic intelligence) are federal Agencies attached to the Department of Public Safety. Agencies and offices
 * Fœderal Bureau of Intelligence: …
 * Fœderal Security Bureau: …
 * All-Union Crime Information Center: …

Department of Emergency and Military Affairs

 * Website: Portal:United States Department of Emergency and Military Affairs

The Department of Emergency and Military Affairs is headed by a Commissioner for Emergency and Military Affairs, sometimes referred to as the “Adjutant-General of the United States”, who is the “the principal assistant to the Governor-General in all matters relating to the Department of Emergency and Military Affairs.” Agencies and offices
 * United States Division of Emergency Management: …
 * United States Division of Military Affairs: …
 * Joint Chiefs of Staff: …
 * Joint Staff : …
 * Department of the Army: …
 * United States Army …
 * Army Criminal Investigative Division: …
 * Department of the Navy: …
 * United States Navy …
 * Naval Criminal Investigative Service: …
 * Department of the Air Force: …
 * United States Air Force …
 * Air Force Office of Special Investigations: …
 * Department of the Marine Corps: …
 * United States Marine Corps …
 * Marine Corps Institute of Heraldry: …
 * Marine Criminal Investigative Service: …

Department of the Treasury

 * Website: Portal:United States Department of the Treasury

The Department of the Treasury is headed by a Commissioner for the Treasury, sometimes referred to as the “Treasurer-General of the United States”, who is the “the principal assistant to the Governor-General in all matters relating to the Department of the Treasury.” Agencies and offices
 * Bureau of Engraving and Printing: …
 * Bureau of Revenue: …
 * Comptroller of the Currency: …
 * Fœderal Institute of Standards and Technology
 * Fœderal Technical Information Service
 * United States Mint: …
 * United States Geological Survey: …
 * United States Patent and Copyright Office: …
 * Treasurer of the United States: …

Department of the Territories

 * Website: Portal:United States Department of the Territories

The United States Department of the Territories is headed by a United States Commissioner for the Territories, sometimes referred to as the “Plenipotentiary-General of the United States”, who is “the principal assistant to the Governor-General in all matters relating to the Department of the Territories and the Territories in general.” Agencies and offices
 * Office of High Representative of the Commissioner: …

Department of Administration

 * Website: Portal:United States Department of Administration

The Department of Administration is headed by a Commissioner for Administration, sometimes referred to as the “Administrator-General of the United States”, who is the “the principal assistant to the Governor-General in all matters relating to the Department of Administration.” Agencies and offices
 * Fœderal Capital Planning Commission: …
 * Fœderal Personnel Management Office: …
 * Fœderal Property Office: …
 * Fœderal Motor Pool Office: …
 * Fœderal Statistics Office: …
 * Fœderal Census Bureau: …
 * Fœderal Strategic Enterprise Technology Office: …

United States Postal Service

 * Website: Portal:United States Postal Service

Expressly mentioned in the United States Constitution, the United States Postal Service is the Federal agency responsible for delivering post and parcels throughout the United States.

The United States Postal Service is headed by the Postmaster-General of the United States, who is “the principal assistant to the Governor-General on all matters relating to the postal service.” Agencies and offices
 * Defense Post Office: …
 * Postal Regulatory Commission: …
 * United States Post Office: …