The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public...

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The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain

Transcript of The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public...

Page 1: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

The Presidency: An Impossible Job?

Dr C Harlen, University of LeedsWhite House photo in public domain

Page 2: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Recent Presidents Have All Failed in Some Way

• Military problems: Johnson, Nixon, G.W.Bush

• Economic problems: Nixon, Ford, Carter, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush

• Misconduct in office: Nixon, Clinton

• Lack of policy knowledge: Reagan

Page 3: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Potential Explanations for Failure

• Faulty selection process

• Poor judgment of electorate

• Overly difficult job

Page 4: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Selection Process: Lengthy and Expensive

• Candidates announce 1 year before primaries

• Increased use of primaries instead of caucuses.

• Frontloading of primaries

• End of reliance on public funding

• These factors restrict who runs

Page 5: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Does the Public Make Inappropriate Choices?

President’s current roles: foreign policy, work with Congress to pass legislation.

Overall: 25 of 44 presidents had Congress

experience (57%) versus 2 out of last six (33%)

Governors mainly. Qualified to be president?

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Powers of the President Alone as Head of State

• Slight similarities with governor’s role

• Commander in chief vs. control of state national guard.

• Represents government.

Government of California photo in public domain

Page 7: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Powers Involving Work with Legislature

Common

• Powers of appointment.

• Passing legislation with approval of legislature.

Different

• Making treaties as head of state (+ 2/3 Senate approval)

• Governors often control issues public care about most

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Powers of President Alone as Head of Government Not Involving Foreign

Policy• Granting reprieves and pardons

• Convening State of the Union Address

• Ensuring laws are faithfully executed

• Wielding ‘executive power’

• Appointing officials

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Is the Job Too Demanding?

Page 10: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Jimmy Carter: Beginning and soon after presidency

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The Secret to Looking Younger: Leaving the Presidency!

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President as Head of State and Government Creates High Expectations!

Source: U.S. National Portrait Gallery education use allowed

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Mount Rushmore, South Dakota

As a work of the U.S. federal government, the image is in the public domain

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Head of State Role Creates Great Expectations

‘The president we get is the country we get...’

Novelist E.L. Doctorow, 2004

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Presidents Can Also Use the Historic Presidency

As a work of the U.S. federal government, the image is in the public domain

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Compared with Prime Ministers

• Less assured support in legislature usually.

• Less unified cabinet.

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Presidents’ Party Often Doesn’t Control Both Branches of Congress

1951 Truman D D D53, 55 EisenhowerR D R

1961 Kennedy D D D1965 Johnson D D D1969 Nixon R D D1974 Ford R D D1977 Carter D D D1981 Reagan R D R1989 G.H.W.BushR D D1993 Clinton D D D1995 Clinton D R R2001 G.W.Bush R R Varied2003 G.W.Bush R R R2007 G.W.Bush R D D2009 Obama D D D

11, 13 Obama D R D

Page 18: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Challenges of the Presidency: Managing the Government

• Over 3 million civilian employees, 1.4 million active military.

• 7,000 political appointments alone (a government of strangers).

• No collective responsibility of cabinet.

Page 19: The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.

Conclusion

• Presidents do not necessarily have or need congressional experience

• Inflated expectations of the president problematic.

• President heads large organisation with no guarantees of loyalty.

• Lack of success not surprising.