Power Approach -- Neustadt Defining power – the “clerkship” of presidential power. "The conditions that promote his leadership in form, preclude a guarantee.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
National Security Players The President & Congress.
Advertisements

United States Presidents Lesson #5 of Packet. Republicans (Counterclockwise around the table beginning in lower left): George H.W. Bush, Abraham Lincoln,
AP US GOVERNMENT & POLITICS. ELECTORAL COLLEGE (Explanation)
Informal Resources and Constraints. Freewrite What formal resources (Congress, Courts, parties, bureaucracy, staff, media, public opinion) give a president.
Presentation by Dr. Kevin Lasher
Fundamentals of Political Science Dr. Sujian Guo Professor of Political Science San Francisco State Unversity
What Is the Rule and Role of Law in Societies? Gerhard Casper and Erik Jensen Summer Fellows Program July 23, 2012.
Domestic Policy Making Defining the President’s Agenda – where to find it. State of the Union messages, other public speeches. More specifically, OMB central.
Presidential Roles and Powers. Formal Powers of the President Constitutional or expressed powers of the presidency Constitutional or expressed powers.
Presidents and Foreign Policy and National Security By the Constitution: Has specific powers that make the office important for foreign policy and national.
Informal Resources and Constraints. Freewrite What formal resources (Congress, Courts, parties, bureaucracy, staff, media, public opinion) give a president.
The American Executive A clerkship?. Founding of the Presidency Fears of executive power Fears of chaos from weak executive Founders disagreed about how.
Constitutional Basics Normative ?-- Hamilton, Fed No. 70. Energy in the Executive Normative ?-- Hamilton, Fed No. 70. Energy in the Executive  one person.
The White House Internship Matthew Bennett 1. The White House Internship 2 Monica Lewinsky.
Competing Theories of the Policy Process
Two Theories about Congress In Congress, Pork Stays on Menu (Washington Post headline) In Congress, Pork Stays on Menu (Washington Post headline) Can.
Political Systems Final Exam Review
The American Executive A clerkship?. Richard Neustadt The Constitution provides for: –Not just separation of powers –Rather, separated institutions SHARING.
The Role of the President and the Executive Branch.
Rating the Presidents “ History makes the man, more than the man makes history.” Richard Nixon.
Politics and Political Science. Defining Characteristics of Politics making of decisions for groups 1.Involves the making of decisions for groups of people.
The Presidency on Trial Assessing the Limits of Presidential Power.
The President.
Stakeholders and Ethics Organizational Stakeholders Stakeholders: people who have an interest, claim, or stake in an organization  Inside stakeholders.
George W. Bush (43). The 2000 Race Al Gore (D)Ralph Nader (G)
Roles, Duties, and Requirements Leadership in Our Country: The U.S. President.
Chapter 14: Growth of Presidential Power - Section 1
Chapter 9 Government.
The American Executive A clerkship?. Freewrite How much power should the president have? What, specifically, are the key powers that you think the president.
Presidential Character
Presidential Power Institutional Sources of Presidential Power –Powers enumerated in Constitution Behavioral or Individual Sources of Presidential Power.
Chapter Twelve The Presidency. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved The Constitutional Basis of Presidential Power The delegates.
Describe the following political cartoon. How does it relate to the power of the President and Vice President?
The American Presidency Unit 4. The Presidency… interesting facts Salary: $400,000 per year Expense account: $50,000 per year Free: Housing Food Transportation.
MANAGEMENT RICHARD L. DAFT.
Politics and Political Science. Defining Characteristics of Politics making of decisions for groups 1.Involves the making of decisions for groups of people.
The Presidency: An Impossible Job? Dr C Harlen, University of Leeds White House photo in public domain.
STYLES OF LEADERSHIP MR. YOUNG AMERICAN GOVERNMENT Unit 6 Chapter 9, Section 3.
Presidential Leadership
Psychological Approach Introduction and overview: the appeal and drawbacks of psychological analysis. Do you think it is important to know a presidential.
Chapter Fourteen The Presidency. Presidential and Parliamentary Systems Presidents may be outsiders; prime ministers are always insiders, chosen by the.
Presidential Character The Imperial Presidency. What is an Imperial Presidency? Phrase became popular in the 1960’s Presidencies that get “out of control”
Tuesday February 4, 2014 OBJ: SWBAT understand the roles of the President and how they set up their inner circle. Drill: What are the requirements to become.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. The Presidency part 4.
Constitutional Powers The Founders recognized the need for a strong executive branch to overcome the weaknesses of the Confederation government and to.
The Presidency American Federal Government. My style: Professional Preppy Leadership styles –2 Theories Clerk and Chief: Congressional power is primary;
The Politics of United States Foreign Policy Chapter 4.
 Head of State/Chief of State: ◦ Represents nation abroad ◦ Performs ceremonial duties  e.g., Lighting Menorah, Christmas tree, throwing out first pitch.
Wilson 14C.  Ike  JFK  LBJ  Nixon  Ford  Carter  Reagan  Bush  Clinton  Bush  Obama?
Ch. 14 Where Does the President’s Power Come From? Article II of the Constitution – Article II of the Constitution – Vaguely written and loosely interpreted.
Copyright © 2014 Cengage Learning FOREIGN POLICY AND NATIONAL SECURITY Chapter Seventeen.
EXECUTIVE BRANCH GENERAL IDEAS FROM CHAPTER 13. Job Effectiveness  Why Presidents have trouble getting things done Other policy makers have their own.
The Presidency. Qualifications Article II of the Constitution Natural Born citizen. Lived in U.S. for 14 years. At Least 35 years old. Should any be added?
 Foreign Policy- a nation’s overall plan for dealing with other nations  Main goals of Foreign Policy:  National security- the ability to keep the.
President of the United States… POTUS. Presidential Roles  Ceremonial  Chief Executive  Commander in Chief  Chief Diplomat  Chief Legislator  Chief.
The United States: A Presidential-Congressional System.
The American Experience in Regulatory Review and Reform Dominic J. Mancini, PhD. Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs U.S. Office of Management.
The Presidency. 14 | 2  Presidents may be outsiders; prime ministers are always insiders, chosen by the members of the majority party in parliament.
Chapter 12: The Presidency
What is required of leaders? Why do nations interact with each other?
What is required of leaders? Why do nations interact with each other?
“Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents”
Ch. 14 The President in Action
Style of Presidential Leadership
Gov Review Video #29: The Presidency - A Brief Intro
“Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents”
The Executive Branch.
The American Presidency
CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS
Presentation transcript:

Power Approach -- Neustadt Defining power – the “clerkship” of presidential power. "The conditions that promote his leadership in form, preclude a guarantee of leadership in fact." Command – the limitations of unilateral presidential power. Not a very effective way for presidents to operate because five conditions have to be in place: direct order, clarity, publicity, ability to carry it out, and authority to do it.

Power approach, cont. Persuasion – the core of presidential power. Separate institutions sharing powers. Successful uses of presidential power don’t come from the Constitution, but from the ability of the president to persuade. Logic doesn’t work: have to make others think it is in their interest to do what the president wants, not because it is in the president’s interest. The “Tom Sawyer” theory of presidential leadership.

Power approach, cont. Professional reputation – the President’s standing “inside the Beltway.” Influence will depend on the appraisals of those who would be influenced Public prestige – the President’s standing in the public (Gallup approval numbers). “Approve of the job the president is doing.” Personal component to this: is it support of the president as an individual? Or more the office? Also, separate the personal from job performance evaluation?

Presidential Approval Ratings Truman Ike JFK LBJ Nixon Ford Carter Reagan Bush 41* Clinton Bush 43*

Power approach, cont. Interaction between reputation and prestige. Making right choices. How to do it: guard power prospects, protect against unrealistic expectations and hopes, has to be his own director of central intelligence (not literally) Examples – Clinton and gays in the military. Didn’t think about the long-term power stakes. Bush and post-war planning attempt to reform Social Security.

Critiques of the Power approach Alternative goals: presidents have pursued goals that are not consistent with the power motivation. Moral leadership, accountability instead of “protecting power stakes” (“the buck stop here”). Alternative sources of influence: Legitimacy and loyalty can be important in addition to prestige, reputation, and legal authority. Methodological – only supports with anecdotes. Ken Mayer’s work on executive orders. Also, approach only makes sense if presidents are trying to influence others. May use confrontation.

Critiques of the Power approach, cont. Prescriptive: As practical advice to pres., how does it stack up? Can lead to "overload and breakdown." Normative: what power ought to be or what it is? Have to ask what power is being used for. Modification of the critique – not wrong so much as incomplete. Presidential power also varies by decision-making situation and substantive policy type. Alternative interpretations of presidential power: charismatic leadership (Max Weber).

Rational Choice Approach Assumptions of the rational choice approach a. Goal directed behavior, consistency, maximize expected value. b. Complete versus incomplete information. c. Explain collective action by looking at the maximizing behavior of individuals. Does this approach make more sense to apply at the mass level or elite level (for example, to study presidents)?

Rational Choice, cont. Applied to other areas of politics a. Social choice / Arrow’s paradox b. Collective Action Apply to the Presidency a. Basic decision theory b. Game theory Approach may be used to formulate hypotheses that can be tested across a variety of issues and presidents. Allows broader generalizations.

Rational Choice, cont. New Institutionalism: the politics of structural choice (Moe): uncertainty, political compromise, and the fear of the state. Importance of public authority, Creates conditions under which it is much more difficult for the president to lead. Response of president: politicize and centralize authority within the White House. Can lead to things like the Iran/Contra affair in the Reagan administration. Also, intelligence failures in the buildup to the war in Iraq.