Title: Presidential Power
1Presidential Power
- Richard Neustadt and the Shape of the
Contemporary Presidency
2The Rise of the Modern Presidency Has Accompanied
the Rise of the Neutral Administrative State
- What is a neutral administrative state?
- What are its origins?
- What are its consequences?
3What does the term neutral administrative state
mean to you?
- Heres how Franklin Roosevelt put it
4Clearly all this calls for a reappraisal of
values. Our task is not discovery or
exploitation of natural resources or necessarily
producing new goods. It is the soberer and less
dramatic business of administering resources and
plants already in hand, of seeking to reestablish
foreign markets for our surplus production, of
meeting the problem of under consumption, of
adjusting production to consumption, of
distributing wealth and products more equitably,
of adapting existing economic organizations to
the service of the people. The day of
enlightened administration has come. FDR,
Commonwealth Club Address, 1932
5Reasons for its growth
- Belief in scientific management
- Decline of political parties as service agencies
- Depression and call for economic intervention
- Entitlement programs that create rights beyond
the reach of partisan politics
6More reasons for the administrative state
- Cold War
- Acts of Congress.
7We hold this truth to be self-evidentthat the
test of representative government is its ability
to promote the safety and happiness of the
people. Democratic Party Platform, 1936
8Richard Neustadts Presidential Power (1961 and
1991)
- Outlined the kind of presidency that fulfilled
the premises of the neutral administrative state - Was immensely influential in the study of the
presidency and - Provided important insights into the connections
among personality, situation, and role
expectations surrounding the presidency.
9What is power?
- Neustadt begins by accepting Robert Dahls
definition of power As ability to get B to do
something he ordinarily would not do. - In Neustadts translation Dahls definition would
look something like
10 When one man shares authority with another, but
does not gain or lose his job upon the others
whim, his willingness to act upon the urging of
the other turns on whether he conceives the
action right for him (340).
11In the end,
- Presidential power is the power to persuade and
the power to persuade is the power to bargain.
12The chart
13Why does Neustadt say that?
- Federal operation spill across dividing lines on
organization charts almost every policy
entangles many agencies almost every program
calls for interagency coloration. Everything
somehow involves the president (342). - Think Homeland Security, Education, Health Care,
Environmental Protection, Nutrition
14But operating agencies owe their existence least
of all to one anotherand only in some part to
him president (342).
- Different statutory bases
- Different committees and subcommittees to
satisfy and - Own peculiar set of clients, friends, and
enemies outside the formal government (342).
15Neustadts Assessment of Some Modern Presidents
- Lauds his feel for power, his connection to his
times and his stance under pressure - Cool, courteous, collected, and tense
- Style emphasized personal command post,
deliberate reaching down for details, hard
questioning of the alternatives, a drive to
protect his options from foreclosure, and a close
watch on follow-through
16Dwight D. Eisenhower
- Kept too aloof
- Liked things to go smoothly
- Confidence highest when the felt he was not
pursuing his own personal advantage - Sought national unity, not power
- Didnt guard his power stakes.
17Harry S. Truman
- Saw no inter-relationship between decisions or
among scraps of information - Man who had a job to do
- Lack of bureaucratic feel
- Confidence came from perception of President as
the man-in-charge - President is the embodiment of history apart from
himself
18James Earl Carter
- No sharp events for dramatizing his many programs
- No ability to read a TV text
- No record in the minds of people but his own
startling emergence from obscurity
19The Advantages and Disadvantages of His Model
20Advantages of Neustadts Model
- An unseen perspective on the presidency
- Understanding that presidential power is
cumulative and reducible - Understanding of the importance of personality
- Power is fragile, uncertain, and depends on
perceptions of others - No one decision will be determinative
- Does a good job of indicating the
non-institutional and informal bases of
presidential power
21The Disadvantages of His Model
- Are command and persuasion the full range of
influence alternatives - Is command really so unworkable
- Neglects identification as a power base
- Those the president might want to influence may
be susceptible to other than instrumental appeals - Are there presidential requests that are acted on
without bargaining and without commanding (i.e.
appeals to internalized values).
22Disadvantages of the Model
- Its not a lot of help in choosing presidents.
Vantage points are the same for all and events
and conditions are unpredictable. All were left
with is experience and personality. - Is this a workable set of rules for presidential
conduct? His prescriptions are universalistic.
All presidential behavior is bargaining behavior
that needs to follow specific rules. Cant this
lead to overload and breakdown? Isnt it too
costly in terms of resources? Must he also
bargain and cant bargaining costs be reduced?
23Some Other Disadvantages
- There is nothing mystical about the presidential
perspective. What is unique is the composition
rather than the constituent elements. - Are pressure-packed decisions the kind presidents
make the most often? - Does the president always have to make a
decision? - Is there any utility to a non-dynamic president?
- Is a president constantly involved in controversy
the best man for all situations?
24What About the Theoretical Framework? The Nexus
Between Personality and Policy.
- The President and Deliberative Democracy An
exercise in elemental representation - Expectations The President and existential
representation