Jimmy Carter was, according to Erwin Hargrove, the first modern
Democratic president to be substantially ahead of the party
coalition. Concerned with issues of the future -- inflation, the
need for tax reform, energy shortages -- Carter anticipated many
questions that are only now being addressed, nearly a decade after
his troubled tenure in office.
The years 1976 to 1980 were difficult years for a Democrat to be
president -- especially difficult for a southern moderate who
viewed the world in Wilsonian terms and who was politically
unaligned, essentially an outsider in his party and in Washington.
But Carter's inability to read or manipulate the political scene
was not the only problem to beleaguer his presidency. Events such
as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the capture of American
hostages in Iran also worked against Carter, creating situations in
which no amount of political acumen could have salvaged his
presidency.
Hargrove places Carter in historical perspective. Examining his
frequently overlooked successes, as well as his failures, Hargrove
analyzes both the content and the methods of Carter's policy
leadership. His style of leadership is studied in the light of his
beliefs and values, and of his problem-solving skills and
experience.
This profile draws heavily upon interviews with members of
Carter's White House staff. In a consideration for Carter's
domestic, economic, and foreign policies, Hargrove shows the
congruence of purpose, politics, and process as a president shapes
decision making. Because Carter was skilled at solving specific
problems, he achieved notable successes -- the Panama Canal Treaty,
the Camp David Accord, and the SALT II talks -- when he could keep
matters in his own hands. Yet, despite such policy successes, his
inability to build strong coalitions and delegate authority,
exacerbated by uncontrollable world events, doomed Carter to
political defeat.
Throughout Jimmy Carter as President, Hargrove emphasizes that
in our assessment of presidents, we should evaluate skill within
the historical context and thereby better understanding the
ingredients of presidential success. Hargrove's effective and
extensive use of interviews proves the advantages of integrating
oral history into scholarly research and writing.
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