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OConnor and Sabato, Chapter 7: The Presidency

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Title: OConnor and Sabato, Chapter 7: The Presidency


1
OConnor and Sabato,Chapter 7 The Presidency
  • Presentation 7.3
  • The Presidents Role in the Legislative Process
    the Impact of Public Opinion

2
Key Topics
  • The role of the president in the legislative
    process the president as policy maker
  • Public Opinion and the President

3
The Role of the President in the Legislative
Process
  • FDR was the first president to send a package of
    legislative proposals to Congress
  • It is the duty of the President to propose and
    it is the privilege of the Congress to dispose
  • Marked a transition in the presidents role in
    the legislative process

4
1a. Presidentialist vs. Congressionalist Views
  • FDRs view illustrates the presidentialist view
  • Article IIs grant of executive authority gives
    president discretionary powers
  • GOP presidents congresspersons often embrace
    the congressionalist view
  • Executive power should be read narrowly
  • Presidents should not intrude into the
    legislative process

5
1ai. Institutional Conflict
  • The public increasingly looks to the president to
    formulate legislative plans
  • Congress has at various times attempted to resist
    presidential influence (e.g. GOP Contract With
    America)
  • Presidents must construct voting majorities in
    Congress to play a constructive role in the
    legislative process

Presidents can always play an obstructionist role
through the use of the veto power.
6
1aii. Presidents Divided Government
  • Presidents have a tough time getting anything
    done when the other party controls one or both
    houses of Congress
  • Presidents are more likely get legislation passed
    that were central themes of their campaign

The Senate can be an especially potent weapon in
the hands of an opposition party.
7
1aiii. Honeymoons and Lame Ducks
  • Presidents are stronger earlier in their
    administrations, and their influence w/ Congress
    wanes later in their administrations
  • LBJ You cant put anything through when half
    the Congress is thinking how to beat you

LBJ being sworn in on Air Force I after JFKs
assassination. Picture courtesy Encarta.
8
1b. Presidential Involvement in the Budgetary
Process
  • Congress spends more time fighting over the
    budget than it does legislating
  • The origins of the presidents role in the
    budgetary process the Great Depression
  • From the Bureau of the Budget (1921) to the
    Office of Management and Budget (1970)

9
1bi. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
  • Works exclusively for the president
  • Employs hundreds of economists and budget/policy
    experts
  • Provides economic forecasts analyzes the costs
    of proposed legislation

10
1bii. The OMB and the Budget
  • Fears of rampant deficits led to passage of the
    Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act
  • Empowered the OMB to eliminate automatic spending
    increases in programs like Social Security

Congress increased OMBs powers to assess each
appropriations bill.
11
1bii. Clintons Balanced Budget?
  • Both parties unwillingness to compromise led
    money to be funneled into deficit reduction
  • The result was the 1st balanced budget in 1998
    since the Nixon administration

Bill Clinton signing the NAFTA Treaty. Picture
courtesy Encarta
Both parties can take credit for balancing the
budget.
12
1c. Ruling Through Regulation
  • Presidents have other means of influencing public
    policy
  • Presidents can issue executive orders, which have
    the effect of law
  • All executive orders are published in the Federal
    Register

13
1ci. George W. Bushs Use of Executive Orders
  • Reversed the Clinton administrations funding of
    fetal tissue research and groups providing
    abortion counseling
  • Limited stem cell research to existing lines
  • Created the Office of Homeland Security (later
    Congress made it a Cabinet-level department)
  • Negated the Presidential Records Act (1978)

The Presidential Records Act established that the
records of presidents belong to the American
people. Bush also blocked access to vice
presidential papers.
14
1d. Winning Support for ProgramsThree Methods of
Winning Support
  • 1st -- Patronage support for congressional
    protégés is helpful
  • 2nd Party discipline personal appeals can be
    effective
  • 3rd Presidential style developing a leadership
    style is often the difference between a great
    and mediocre president

15
1dii. Presidential Leadership
  • Is there a psychological profile that will help
    identify great leaders
  • James David Barbers typology of presidential
    personalities (see next slide)
  • Is the saying The times make the man (or woman)
    true?

16
1diii. Barbers Typology of Presidential Character
17
1div. The Power to Persuade
  • Political scientist Richard E. Neustadt argues
    that presidential power is the power to
    persuade
  • Individuals ability to bargain and compromise
    goes a long way toward determining whether a
    presidency will be successful or not

18
2. Public Opinion the President
  • Presidents can gain support by going public
  • Teddy Roosevelt and the bully pulpit
  • Passed legislation unpopular with his own party
    by appealing to the public

19
2i. The Impact of Scandals on the Presidency
  • People have become more skeptical of presidential
    actions as a result of several bad scandals
  • LBJs credibility gap on Vietnam
  • Nixon, Watergate, and the abuse of executive
    privilege
  • U.S. v. Nixon (1974) the Court unanimously held
    that executive privilege did not empower the
    president to refuse to comply with judicial orders

20
2ii. The Impact of Watergate
  • Public cynicism of politicians increased
  • Journalist-politician relationships turned
    adversarial
  • Partisan animosity escalated

Nixon saying farewell after resigning the
presidency on Aug. 9, 1974. Picture courtesy
Encarta.
21
2a. Going Public
  • Making direct appeals to the electorate to
    support legislative proposals
  • Wholesaling making national appeals via
    television
  • Retailing making targeted appeals to key states

22
2b. Presidents vs. Prime MinistersPresidents
Prime Ministers
  • Greater appointment powers
  • Larger staffs
  • Head of separate institution from legislature
  • Harder to remove
  • Can be removed by vote of no confidence
  • Do not face term limits
  • Part of the legislature (guaranteed support)

Presidents in countries like Egypt, China, and
Mexico bear little relation to the American
presidency in terms of power or role in
government.
23
2b. Presidential Approval Ratings
  • The importance of survey data in determining
    presidential success
  • Popular presidents can get things done unpopular
    presidents face greater obstacles
  • Presidents tend to be popular early in their terms

Random poll respondents answer to a single
question -- Do you approve or disapprove of the
presidents performance in office? goes a long
way toward determining a presidents ability to
achieve his/her goals.
24
2bi. The Vagaries of Approval RatingsThe Strange
Case of Bill Clinton
  • Came into office with low approval ratings (a
    plurality president)
  • In 1994, Clinton bottomed out at below 40
    approval
  • However, he rebounded and won reelection
  • Approval ratings remained high despite (or
    because of?) personal scandals

Clintons 1st term rebound was helped in part by
his conflict w/ the GOP- dominated Congress. The
govt. shutdown was blamed on Republicans.
25
Conclusion Continuity and ChangeA Woman
President?
  • Victoria Woodhull was the 1st women to seek the
    presidency
  • Sen. Margaret Chase Smith campaigned for the GOP
    nomination in 1964
  • Elizabeth Dole campaigned for the GOP nomination
    in 2000
  • No woman has waged a credible campaign to date

What obstacles do women face in seeking the
presidency? Are Americans still too biased to
elect a woman president?
26
Conclusion cont.Americans Polled Could You Vote
for a Woman Candidate for President?
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