This is a thoroughly revised, in-depth analysis of the American
presidency by a major scholar in the field. The main goal of the
text is to explain how the president's ability to implement policy
is circumscribed by several major factors: *the Madisonian
separation of powers; *the decentralized power structure in
Congress; *the number of cross-party coalitions needed to pass
legislation; *a slow-moving federal bureaucracy; and *the powerful
influence of special interest groups opposed to many presidential
initiatives.
Included in this second edition is coverage of the first two
years of the Clinton presidency and a special chapter on the
emergence of the presidential branch--the White House staff--and
its displacement of the cabinet and the executive departments as
the foremost decision-making agents in the federal government (a
unique chapter not found in other texts). Since highly unstable
relations between the president and congress have become the
hallmark of our national government, especially in this era of
divided government, a new chapter on the president and congress has
been added to the text. The growing role of the vice president, an
original chapter in the first edition, has been expanded and
updated to include the Gore vice presidency. The chapter on
proposed reforms of the presidency received wide approval in the
first edition. In the second edition special attention is devoted
to the proposal to abolish the Electoral College and replace it
with direct election of the president. This edition focuses heavily
on the activist presidential leadership of the modern presidency,
but notes its perishable nature. High presidential approval
ratings, as George Bush demonstrated, cannot be stockpiled or
deposited in the bank, to be drawn upon later.
Along the way the author makes several major points: 1. the
excessive demands that the American public imposes on its
presidents threaten to turn the nation's highest office into a
series of one-term presidents; 2. the decline of political parties
as vehicles for mobilizing presidential support has forced the
nation's chief executive to go over the heads of congress and
directly to the public to solicit support for his policies; and 3.
the emerging dangers of electronic democracy and national referenda
and the potential rise of a plebiscitary president all pose more
imminent threats to our shared powers system than most
presidential-watchers have been willing to concede.
General
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