PS 408 – The American Presidency
The Historical Approach
September 11-13
Historical approach:
periods or eras
The traditional system: 1789-1932.
The patronage state. Nature of politics within this political
system: Congress-centered to the extent that the national government was
involved. Relation
between nature of the regime and politics.
Evidence that founders intended Congress
to dominate? Electoral
control of the presidency. King Caucus, deadlock of 1800, and the 12th Amendment. Power of the purse.
Periods or eras, cont.
Modern Presidency: 1933 – present.
Need for a strong president came with the Great
Depression. Ushered in
the regulatory and redistributive state.
Contrast to Congress, which has been largely unchanged as an institution
since the 1800s.
Components of the New Deal revolution:
Constitutional
change: more expansive interpretation of
the commerce clause. “switch
in time that save nine.” NLRB v.
Laughlin Steel (1937), Wickard v. Filburn (1942). Unchallenged until the Lopez case in 1995.
Modern presidency, cont.
Governmental change:
new government responsibilities for income security, the economy,
fairness in labor practices, etc.
Institutional change:
end of congressional government. Delegate power to the bureacracy.
Political change:
pushed parties to the periphery and created more direct link between the
president and the people.
Modern Presidency, cont.
Consequences of the modern presidency
Ted Lowi – the plebiscitary presidency: pressure for the president to expand
power. Examine Watergate and the recent
practices of domestic spying, torture, extraordinary rendition, etc.
The presidency in the media age: the shift from “institutionalized
pluralism” to “individualized pluralism” (Sam Kernell).
Historical approach: cycles
Stephen Skowronek – political
time. Constitutional and “national
development” approaches are well established, but they overlook the recurrent
patterns of history. Common historical
context faced by presidents in similar junctures of political time. Three repeating regime types:
a. Regime
construction: Jackson and FDR.
Challenges and opportunities faced by presidents who are at the
beginning of a new party system.
Cycles approach, cont.
b.
Regime management: Polk and Kennedy. Reaffirmation and
articulation. Continue the
policies of their predecessors.
•Regime
enervation: Pierce and Carter.
Disjunction. Difficulty of
holding the regime together.
Problems with the approach:
Role for Congress? Divided government and role of minority party. Unique challenges faced by modern
presidents? Higher
expectations.
Applying the historical approach
Evolution of the nomination process
King Caucus,1800-1824. Congress
controlled nomination.
Party
conventions, 1832-1908, party leaders
Emergent
primaries, 1912-1968, voters started to play a role, but still party leaders.
Dominant
primaries, 1972, McGovern-Fraser reforms in 1972 made the primaries the only
path to nomination.
Evolution of the general election: partisan electors in the Electoral College.
Which approach does this fit better – periods or cycles?
Where would Clinton and George W. Bush fit in Skowronek’s approach?