Questions
and Answers About American Politics
Political scientist Stephen J. Wayne,
professor of government at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., answers a
wide range of questions about the American political system. A specialist on
the presidency, Wayne addresses the question of who was the most popular
American president in the 20th century and did his popularity have anything to
do with his effectiveness? Wayne also discusses the relationship between the
presidency and Congress, and outlines what conditions are usually required for
a president to work harmoniously with Congress. In addition, Wayne ponders the
significance of the election of a woman as president.
Questions and Answers About American
Politics
Q: Why do
so few Americans vote in national elections?
A: Only
about 50 percent of American voters cast ballots in presidential elections and
less than 40 percent do so in congressional elections. Some people argue that
state registration procedures discourage voting; some believe that holding the
election on a weekday when most people are working discourages it. However,
public cynicism and apathy seem to be the principal culprits. A lot of people
apparently believe that it will make no difference in their lives who wins the
election, that their one vote doesn't matter, and that all politicians are the
same. Complacency tends also to be greater in good times, when people are
satisfied, than in bad times, when they are hurting, unhappy, or just plain
mad.
Q: Why do
candidates from the Democratic and Republican parties often take similar stands
on so many issues?
A: The
Republican and Democratic parties are broad-based, mainstream parties. They
have maintained their longevity and dominance in American politics by taking
positions within the mainstream of public opinion. And the American public as a
whole tends to be politically moderate, not ideological or extreme. When the
parties have nominated ideological candidates for president—such as Republican
Barry M. Goldwater in 1964 and Democrat George McGovern in 1972—they have not
done as well as when they have nominated mainstream candidates. One exception
was Republican Ronald W. Reagan, who was elected president in 1980 despite his
strong ideological views, not because of them.
Q: What
does a president do in his capacity as chief executive?
A: As
chief executive of the United States government, a president oversees the
execution of the laws Congress enacts. In this role, presidents preside over
the executive branch of government. They nominate—and with the advice and
consent of the Senate—appoint the top political officials who serve in the
executive branch. These officials include the secretaries of the 14 departments
and their deputies and assistants, as well as the administrators of the
executive agencies, such as the Social Security Administration.
Presidents
can issue executive orders to their subordinates to perform certain ministerial
jobs in a certain way. For example, President Ronald Reagan issued an order to
forbid federal officials who worked at federally funded clinics to discuss
abortion. President Bill Clinton repealed that order. In 2000 Clinton issued an
executive order to all executive branch officials prohibiting them from
discriminating against a person in hiring or promotion because of that person's
sexual orientation. Executive orders have the force of law, but they can be
overturned by an act of Congress or rescinded by presidents.
Q: What
can a president do as commander in chief?
A: As
commander in chief, the United States president is the civilian head of the
military. Toward the end of World War II, President Harry S. Truman gave the
order to drop the atomic bomb. The president can issue orders to U.S. armed
forces, such as the 1990 order George Bush gave to deploy American military in
the Persian Gulf and, later, to remove Iraqi forces from Kuwait. During the
1999 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) air strikes against Serbian
forces in Kosovo, President Clinton indicated which targets were permissible
for U.S. forces and which were not.
Q: How is
policy coordinated in the executive branch of the United States government? Who
coordinates it?
A: The
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) coordinates most administration policy
through its three major processes: budgetary review, legislative clearance, and
regulatory review. In this capacity the OMB acts as the president’s surrogate,
his executive branch facilitators, and the “cops” who make sure that the
administration speaks with a single voice: the president’s.
The
budgetary review process in the executive branch occurs over a nine-month
period beginning in late April or early May and continuing until the
president’s budget is finished and presented to Congress by the first Monday in
February for the fiscal year that begins on October 1 of the same year. The
departments are given guidelines and are expected to formulate their budgets in
terms of these guidelines. The OMB reviews their formulation and makes
decisions. There is a short period for appeals to the president and then the
budget is finalized.
In
legislative review, the executive departments and agencies must submit certain
things to the OMB for approval prior to the time they send this material to
Congress. This material includes positions they wish to take on pending
legislation, prepared testimony they have been invited to give to Congress, and
any legislative proposals that they would like to see enacted into law. The OMB
coordinates and controls the final product, although there may be give-and-take
between the departments, agencies, and the OMB. But as the president’s
surrogate, the OMB has the last word. People in the OMB work closely with the
policy people in the Executive Office of the President (EOP). The top OMB
officials are housed in the same building—often on the same floor—as the policy
staff. The top OMB people are political appointees; the analysts are civil
servants.
Regulatory
review is a process that began in the Reagan administration, whereby
departments and executive agencies are required to submit any major regulations
they wish to put forth to the OMB prior to the official announcement of the
regulation in the Federal Register. The OMB then determines whether the
proposed regulations are necessary, cost-effective, and consistent with the
president's program. No major regulation can be issued unless it meets these
three criteria as determined by the OMB.
Q: Why is
the electoral college, rather than direct popular election, used to elect U.S.
presidents?
A: The
electoral college was designed by the framers of the U.S. Constitution as an
indirect method of presidential selection. The framers did not have a great
deal of confidence in the ability of the common people to make such a decision.
The framers believed that electors—who probably would be better educated than
average citizens—would make independent judgments, choosing candidates who were
the most qualified, not necessarily the most popular. Once the political party
system developed in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, electors became
agents of their parties. Their votes reflected their partisan loyalties, not
their own considered judgment.
Q: What
is the difference between the White House and the Executive Office of the
President?
A: The
White House is one of 12 offices and two residences—the president's and vice
president's—in the Executive Office of the President (EOP). The EOP was
established in 1939 by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
In
addition to the White House office, there is the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB), which has about 550 people. It is the largest EOP office and one
of the most important. Most of the people in the OMB are civil servants. They
help prepare the budget, coordinate legislation, oversee management activities,
and review department and agency regulations before they are issued.
Other EOP
offices include the three policy councils: domestic, economic, and national
security. Also in the EOP offices are the president's science adviser, the
office of the United States trade representative, the office of drug policy and
prevention of abuse, the vice president's staff, the council on environmental
quality, and the office of administration.
Approximately
1,700 people work in the EOP. The most important officials who do not have
White House offices are situated in the Old Executive Office Building next to
the White House and the newer OMB building on 17th Street in Washington, D.C.
Q: How
well did Franklin Delano Roosevelt prepare Harry Truman for the presidency?
A: FDR
did little to prepare Truman for the presidency. As a compromise choice for
vice president at the 1944 Democratic convention, Truman had virtually no
executive experience except running a haberdashery that went bankrupt. Prior to
being vice president, he had been a senator from Missouri.
In fact,
after he was sworn in as vice president, Truman never had a one-on-one meeting
with President Roosevelt, although he did attend several sessions with others.
He was even unaware of the development of the atomic bomb at the time he became
president.
Ironically,
Truman in turn did little to prepare his own vice president, Alban Barkley of
Kentucky, for the job should something have happened to Truman. Eisenhower was
the first to involve his vice president, Richard Nixon, in the policy-making
circles of the Eisenhower White House. But even Nixon did not have an office in
the West Wing of the White House. His office was across the street.
Q: What
are the different roles first ladies have assumed?
A: First
ladies have assumed three roles: social hostess, social and educational
spokeswoman, and policy adviser and advocate. The first role, both social and
ceremonial, is the oldest and the one that every first lady has performed since
Martha Washington. It involves greeting and meeting guests at official
functions at the White House, such as state dinners; accompanying the president
on international and national visits; and taking part in the social and
ceremonial activities that are part of the trip. The social hostess role also
involves exercising some influence over the decor and management of the White
House.
The
second role—that of spokeswoman for good causes—began with Lou Henry Hoover,
wife of Herbert Hoover. She was an advocate for the Red Cross. Jackie Kennedy
was instrumental in the renovation of Lafayette Park across from the White
House and in the emphasis she placed on cultural and international activities.
Lady Bird Johnson had a beautification program. Betty Ford spoke out on women's
issues and later on drug rehabilitation. Rosalyn Carter was concerned with
mental health and its treatment, and Nancy Reagan advocated a “Just Say No”
policy on drugs. Barbara Bush was concerned with literacy. Hillary Rodham
Clinton focused on issues of family values and human rights.
One of
three first ladies who were involved with policy matters was Edith Wilson,
after her husband was incapacitated with a stroke in 1919. It is alleged that
Mrs. Wilson made decisions for the president and put his signature on official
documents. Eleanor Roosevelt influenced her husband on issues of health, civil
rights, and women: It was through her pressures that President Roosevelt
appointed the first woman to the Cabinet. Hillary Rodham Clinton, the first
spouse to be given an office in the West Wing of the White House, was involved
behind the scenes on a variety of issues. She took a very public role in her
support of the president's health-care reform of which she was the principal
adviser and policymaker.
Q: What
do former presidents do? Do they have to work or do they get a pension?
A: Former
presidents can do almost anything they want. When Richard Nixon left the White
House, he wrote books on foreign policy. Gerald Ford played golf, joined
corporate boards, and made speeches—frequently for large fees. Jimmy Carter
built up his presidential library, particularly its humanitarian fund. He has
been active in a variety of charitable causes and has acted as an international
mediator. Ronald Reagan made a few speeches but was basically forced into
retirement because of his illness, Alzheimer's disease. George Bush has done a
variety of activities, including writing and speaking. Bill Clinton plans to
write, give speeches, and work on his presidential library. He will probably
participate in a variety of business-related activities, as well as perform the
social functions of a Senate spouse.
Q: What
is the history of the U.S. president’s budget?
A:
Congress established the requirement for an executive budget in 1921 with the
enactment of the Budget and Accounting Act. Prior to that time, executive
departments and agencies went directly to Congress for their annual
appropriation, and the president had no formal role in the budget process.
From 1921
to 1939, a budget division operated from within the Treasury Department,
coordinating the cycle for the preparation of the annual presidential budget and
its presentation to Congress. In 1939 Franklin Roosevelt got legal authority to
create the Executive Office of the President and moved the Bureau of the Budget
into that office, where it has remained ever since. In 1970 President Nixon
enlarged the agency's functions to include management improvement in the
executive branch and changed the name of the office to The Office of Management
and Budget (OMB), which is its current title.
OMB has
about 550 people working for it. Most are career civil servants. There are
about 20 political appointees who serve at the pleasure of the president. They
include the director, deputy director, five program associate directors, and
the heads of various offices.
Q: How
long do presidential transitions take and how much do they cost?
A:
Officially, transitions take 75 to 77 days—the time from the election to the
inauguration. Unofficially, they last longer. Often begun quietly during the
campaign, transitions last until the administration is staffed and begins to
function. In 2000, because of the Florida election controversy, the official
transition lasted only 36 days. However, George W. Bush let it be known during
the campaign who would handle transition matters: Clay Johnson, Bush’s chief of
staff when he was governor of Texas. Once the election was determined, Johnson
became the executive director of the transition and Dick Cheney became the
official head.
Congress
has enacted legislation to help pay the costs of transition. The newly elected
administration received $5 million for expenses during the transition. The
General Service Administration provided office space and computer facilities.
In addition to these official expenses, there are the costs of the inaugural
activities: the dances, parade, and other festivities, which includes outlays
for food, music, overtime wages for police, and building rentals. These costs
are paid for by voluntary contributions and ticket sales.
Q: Would
other forms of government such as socialism work in the United States? If so,
what would have to happen in order for that to work?
A:
Socialism is an economic system in which the government controls certain
principal industries and distributes resources to the society as a whole. We
have had socialist communities, but no socialist government in the United
States of which I am aware. However, there has been a persistent conservative
Republican reaction to the big-government, domestic programs that began in
Franklin Roosevelt's administration and continued through Lyndon Johnson's.
Some of these critics believed that Clinton's health-care proposal to the
Congress would have fit into the 'socialist' category.
Socialized
medicine would be a system like the Canadian system in which all citizens are
entitled to benefits and the costs are paid for by tax and other government
revenues. The closest we have come to a socialized system in the United States
is Social Security, a pension system run by the government for the benefit of
retirees who meet the criteria of having paid into the system for a certain
number of years. Medicare and Medicaid are also social systems.
Our
country seems to be moving in the direction of the private sector for social
benefits, not the government. President Bush would privatize some of Social
Security; the Republicans wish to have Medicare as one of a number of health
insurance forms; and the others would be operated by the private sector.
Although we could theoretically have greater government control of the economy
and distribution of social benefits without changing the Constitution, such a
situation does not seem likely as long as there is so much public mistrust of
government and those who work in it.
Q: What
is the Office of the Pardon Attorney?
A: It is
the job of the pardon attorney to review appeals for pardons and clemency and
to complete a report for the president, through the attorney general, that
describes the case, the court decision, the judgment, and the opinion of law
enforcement officials as to the merits of the appeal.
Q: Why do
political parties in the United States have less influence over candidates and
policies than they once had?
A:
Political parties in the United States have lost influence over their
candidates largely because of the reforms they made in nomination processes
beginning in the 1970s. Primary elections and caucuses have replaced the
selection of presidential and congressional candidates by party leaders.
Primaries and caucuses allow rank-and-file party members to participate in the
selection of their party’s nominees. Thus candidates for the nomination appeal
to their party's electorate, not to the party leadership, to become the
nominee. Candidates run on their own record and promises, not necessarily on
the party's. It is natural that they would try to redeem these promises once
elected. Today's political parties stand for what their elected officials stand
for and not the other way around.
Q: Why
does the cost of political campaigns seem to keep rising?
A: A
variety of factors account for the rising cost of campaigns. Media advertising,
which has become the primary way to communicate with voters, is expensive, more
so now than in the past. The proliferation of primaries, elections to select a
political party’s nominees for public office, has added to the money game. Now
most candidates have to run in two elections, one for the nomination and one
for the general election, rather than just one.
Another
reason for the increase in expenditures has been the new, and expensive,
technology used by candidates: public opinion polls, direct mail, computerized
voter lists, targeted messages, and other tools. More candidates are funding
polls to determine their strengths and weaknesses. Weaker party organizations
at the grass-roots level mean that candidates must either pay for professionals
to do the work or build their own organization, both of which incur
considerable cost.
The use
of soft money to circumvent the limits placed on campaign contributions has
made campaigns more expensive. In addition, money spent by interest groups and
political parties on issue advocacy, which entails pushing a particular policy
or position and associating it with a candidate, has played a role.
Other
factors that have pushed campaigning costs up include the decline in voter
turnout (more money has to be spent just getting people to vote); the
prosperity of the country (as people become wealthier, they have more money to
give and spend on elections); and the move toward “constant campaigning,” in
which campaigns never cease, from the moment of election to reelection. Given
these factors, total campaign expenditures are going up, up, and up with no end
in sight.
Q: How is
it possible for a U.S. president to get elected without winning the highest
number of popular votes?
A: The
presidential election is decided in the electoral college, in which states give
their electoral votes to the candidate who wins the popular vote. It is a
winner-take-all system that awards all of a state’s electoral votes to a single
candidate. Since there is no proportional representation, losers get nothing.
Thus a candidate who loses the popular vote by a narrow margin in the large
states—those that have the most electoral votes—and wins by a large margin in
the middle-sized and smaller states may win the popular vote but fail to win a
majority of electoral votes.
In the
2000 presidential election, Democratic candidate Al Gore lost to Republican
candidate George W. Bush, even though Gore won the popular vote. Such a result
has occurred just twice before in American history, both in the 19th century:
the election of Rutherford B. Hayes in 1876 and the election of Benjamin
Harrison in 1888.
Q: How
does the public evaluate the president?
A: In
general, the public employs three criteria when they evaluate U.S. presidents.
One relates to external condition and events. If these are favorable—if the
economy is strong, for example—and if presidents can demonstrate some
responsibility for contributing to these conditions or events, then they tend
to get credit for it, probably more than they deserve. The opposite is true as
well. Presidents get more blame than they merit if conditions and events are
unfavorable.
A second
set of judgment criteria used by the public are “in agreement” measures. People
tend to evaluate presidents more highly when they agree with them
philosophically, ideologically, and politically. Conservative Republicans who
opposed a strong role for the national government in domestic affairs supported
President Ronald Reagan far more than did those who had different beliefs and
loyalties. Similarly, most Democrats remained loyal to President Bill Clinton
throughout his presidency. But as Clinton adopted and pursued moderate,
traditionally Republican positions such as free trade, some Democrats,
including organized labor, mounted a major movement to oppose free trade and
the President’s pursuit of it.
The third
group of factors that the public uses when assessing presidents are personal
traits and behavior. The presidency as an institution demands strength,
boldness, decisiveness, courage, empathy, knowledge, communicative skills, and
honesty, to name a few desirable qualities. Some people want the president to
set a good example, to be a model for the nation, a person whom its citizens
respect. Presidents who demonstrate these desirable characteristics are viewed
favorably as individuals, even if their policies may be criticized. Presidents
who appear to lack these qualities, which may be demonstrated by their
behavior, are viewed more critically on a personal level. This happened to Bill
Clinton, who had high job approvals but much lower personal approval ratings in
his second term in office.
Q: Are
public expectations of U.S. presidential leadership unrealistic?
A: You
bet they are, but it is not the public’s fault. Presidential candidates make
hundreds of promises, propose many and sometimes conflicting policies, and
rarely prioritize courses of action. They also give the impression that if they
are elected, they will redeem their promises and achieve their policies—not
like the other guy.
But the
U.S. Constitution was not designed to promote the dominance of one branch of
government; it was designed to prevent that dominance by separating powers
among the different branches. Nor did the framers of the Constitution envision
a large policy-making role for the president; they saw most public
policy-making as emanating from the U.S. Congress, not the president.
The
public expects that if there is a problem the president will propose a
solution; if there is a crisis, the president will manage it; if there is an
international confrontation, the president will protect American lives and
interests. Yet most problems, crises, and international confrontations cannot
be resolved solely by the president. Rather they are the product of many
factors and events, some of which may be in the president’s control, but most
of which probably are not.
For
example, the public expects the president to fix a broken economy—one that is
stagnant, inflated, or depressed. But presidents cannot do so alone. Congress,
the Federal Reserve System, and the private sector all contribute to a
solution, much as they may all have contributed to the problem in the first
place. Expectations of presidential leadership demand too much from a single
person and that’s unrealistic.
Q: Do
U.S. presidents have any judicial powers?
A: The
U.S. Constitution regards the president as a court of last resort. In much the
same manner, the British monarch, in bygone days, could make a final decision
to reverse or support the judgment of subordinate officials. A president can
pardon those accused of federal crimes, as Gerald Ford did when he pardoned his
predecessor, Richard Nixon, for crimes that he committed or may have committed
as president. A president can grant clemency, as Bill Clinton did for several
people who had been convicted and jailed for their involvement in terrorist
activities intended to demonstrate support for the independence of Puerto Rico.
A president can provide amnesty, as Jimmy Carter did for those who had violated
the Selective Service Act and refused to serve in the Vietnam War. All of these
presidential actions generated political controversy, but they did not raise
questions about the president’s authority to do as he did.
The president
also has authority to instruct the attorney general, the chief law enforcement
officer of the U.S. government, to investigate, prosecute, and appeal lower
court decisions. Sometimes presidents will have some discretion in how the
attorneys general execute a court decision as well.
Q: Is it
possible for a person with a mental illness such as manic depression to be
elected president?
A: The
Constitution does not state that people with a medical or mental illness cannot
be elected president. It would be up to the electorate to decide whether a
person was mentally fit to be president.
In 1972
the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, Thomas Eagleton, had a condition that
resembled manic depression. When that condition became public, he was forced to
resign as the Democratic nominee. Now, almost 30 years later and with modern
medicine, I am not sure whether he would have resigned or let the people
decide.
Q: How
does a president’s personality affect his decisions? Are certain types of
personalities better suited for presidential leadership?
A: As
much as we may deify a president, he is a human being with feelings and
emotions like the rest of us. If he is sick, irritable, angry, or tired, it is
likely to affect his decision-making. A president's character is important. It
indicates the amount of ambition, integrity, and people skills that he
possesses.
Bill
Clinton, who served as president from 1993 to 2001, is known for his ambition.
He has said that he wanted to be president ever since he shook the hand of
President John F. Kennedy as a junior in high school. During his presidency,
Clinton's integrity was called into question by his attempt to conceal an
intimate relationship with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, a scandal that
resulted in Clinton’s impeachment. Some members of the Republican Party alleged
that the president lied about his relationship with Ms. Lewinsky under oath, an
action that constituted a violation of the presidential oath he took to
“preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.”
Clinton's Democratic defenders, however, claimed that his integrity was best
revealed by his desire to work hard for the good of the country. Everyone
agrees that Bill Clinton has great people skills. Republicans think Clinton
uses those skills to manipulate people; Democrats say that Clinton genuinely
likes people and wants to help them.
Psychological
characteristics also affect a president’s governing style and worldview. Ronald
Reagan was comfortable delegating considerable responsibility to others while
Jimmy Carter was a hands-on president. Presidents Reagan and George Bush saw
the world in terms of good (the non-Communist world) and bad (the Communist
world). Clinton saw the post-Communist world as more nuanced, with finer shades
of distinction.
President
George W. Bush has good people skills, but he is not known as a deep thinker or
a detail-oriented policy expert as Vice President Al Gore and Clinton were. His
style is to delegate to others. It remains to be seen how he views the world.
Q: Which
20th-century president was the most popular?
A: Only
since the administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt have public opinion
pollsters conducted scientific surveys to assess presidential popularity. These
surveys, which have greatly increased in number, sophistication, and scope, use
public approval of the president as their basic measurement of presidential
popularity. The question is, Do you generally approve or disapprove of the job
the president is doing?
Since the
administration of Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Gallup poll has been calculating
average yearly approval ratings for presidents. The highest approval ratings,
all above 70 percent, were recorded for John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Baines
Johnson after they took office, and for Eisenhower at the end of his first
term. The lowest approval ratings, all below 40 percent, went to Gerald R. Ford
after his pardon of Richard Milhous Nixon, Jimmy Carter at the end of his
administration following the failed rescue operation for U.S. hostages held in
Iran, and George Bush during the 1992 recession. It is interesting to note that
at the end of the Persian Gulf War, Bush’s approval rating approached 90
percent. His drop in approval was the steepest on record. Bill Clinton’s
approval rating was much higher in his second term than in his first and
reached its highest point after he was acquitted by the Senate in his
impeachment trial.
It is
harder to measure popularity after presidents leave office. Harry S. Truman’s
popularity rose significantly, Nixon’s remained low, and Kennedy’s fell
somewhat. Ultimately it is the academic historians and political scientists
whose interpretations and reevaluations determine a president’s legacy and
place in history, not the general public.
Q: Does
the U.S. president serve important psychological or symbolic functions?
A: The
U.S. president is head of government and head of state. As head of government,
the president proposes and implements public policy. As head of state, the
president represents the country, meets with foreign leaders, presides over
ceremonies, manages crises, and communicates and interacts with the people. In
both capacities, the president personifies the government. By doing so, he
gives people an uncomplicated way to evaluate government performance.
The
president also satisfies the needs of some people for a larger-than-life
figure, a charismatic leader, a helmsman to steer the ship of
state—particularly in bad times—and an empathetic and caring ruler in times of
disaster. People want a common person with uncommon traits as their president,
a person of the people but one who towers over them, a public servant, policy
maker, political leader, and royal-like figure all rolled up into one.
Q: What
is the history of the president’s State of the Union address?
A: George
Washington gave the first State of the Union address. It was a formal occasion;
Washington traveled to the Capitol by a horse-drawn coach and presented the
speech just as the British prime minister would give the speech to the king or
queen with the lords in attendance. John Adams followed Washington's lead, but
Thomas Jefferson, who was not a good public orator, sent his speech to Congress
to be read by the clerk of the House of Representatives. Over the years this
practice continued with the address becoming in effect a report on what the
departments and agencies had accomplished in the last year.
Woodrow
Wilson resumed the practice of giving the State of the Union message himself.
It became a more political address. Harry S. Truman is the father of the modern
State of the Union address. He is the first to use it to present his
legislative program in 1948, a practice that his successors have followed. He
is also the first to have it televised across the country and to give it during
prime time in the evening.
Today's
State of the Union message is a collaborative effort that takes several months
to create. Government departments and agencies are asked for their input, the White
House coordinates that input, and the speechwriters go through several versions
in conjunction with the president, chief of staff, vice president, and other
advisers. The president often rehearses the speech several times before he
presents it to Congress in late January or early February. Bill Clinton
reputedly made changes in the address in his car ride from the White House to
the Capitol.
Q: What
is the function of the president’s cabinet? Who may belong to the Cabinet?
A: With
the development of policy councils in the White House, the Cabinet's role as an
advisory body to the president has been diminished. Not since the Eisenhower
administration has the Cabinet served in this capacity.
The
Cabinet no longer functions as an effective advisory body because it has become
too large, too diverse, and too leaky. All department heads and the vice
president are automatically members of the president's cabinet. In addition,
there are other administrators that were traditionally given cabinet rank and
thus were invited to Cabinet meetings: the United Nations ambassador, the
Environmental Protection Agency administrator, and the U.S. Trade
Representative.
The
primary function of the Cabinet as a collectivity today is nothing more than to
pose for a group picture at the beginning of the administration. Individually,
cabinet members have considerable authority within their respective
departments. By tradition the Inner Cabinet—the attorney general and the
secretaries of state, defense, and treasury—have the greatest prestige and
presumably the greatest influence with the president. Other cabinet members'
influence stems from their personal relationship to the president.
Q: How is
policy made in the presidency? Who makes it?
A: Since
the 1960s, policy councils have been established in the White House to
formulate priorities for presidential policy. John F. Kennedy was the first
president to set up a national security operation within the White House, which
he used to keep himself informed and involved in foreign policy and national
security affairs. Lyndon Johnson expanded this office and used it as a primary
advisory group for the war in Vietnam. Johnson also established a domestic
counterpart in the White House to help him design and coordinate his Great
Society program. Richard Nixon enlarged both councils under the direction of
Henry Kissinger for national security and John Erlichman for domestic policy.
All
presidential councils were in charge of developing and coordinating major
presidential initiatives. Gerald Ford added an economic policy board that
became the forerunner of the economic councils that have functioned since
Ronald Reagan’s administration to formulate major economic policy.
Each of
these policy councils is headed by an assistant to the president and a deputy
assistant, both of whom work in the West Wing of the White House and are
included on its payroll. The rest of the staff, anywhere from 25 to 100 people,
have their offices in the Old Executive Office Building next to the White House
and are on the Executive Office of the President (EOP) budget.
There are
also councils on space and technology and environmental affairs, and they are
part of the EOP.
Not only
do these councils develop policy for the administration, but they also
incorporate the resources of the executive branch departments and agencies,
respond to congressional initiatives and legislative changes to the president's
proposals, and brief the president for major speeches, meetings, and events in
which these policy issues will be discussed.
Q: What
presidential program (Monroe Doctrine, Four Freedoms, New Deal, or other
program) has had the most impact on American society?
A:
Programs that have the greatest impact are those that change the course of
public policy. They are usually preceded by an era in which the contemporary
policy has not produced a satisfactory consequence—hence, the pressure to
change and the public’s receptivity to change.
In the
domestic area, Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton’s Report on Manufactures
is usually cited as the building block for America’s initial economic growth,
while Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in areas outside
of Union control. Later constitutional amendments prohibited slavery, protected
the rights of newly freed people, and penalized states that prevented their
citizens from obtaining due process and equal protection of the laws.
It wasn’t
until the 20th century that this growth started producing social conditions
that had an adverse effect on society. Thus, the need and demand for government
to begin to regulate this activity. Theodore Roosevelt’s Square Deal Program
and Woodrow Wilson’s New Freedom program contained regulatory, antitrust, and
conservation measures. During the Great Depression, Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s
New Deal policy helped involve government in the economy and made the president
the manager—a role that presidents must still play. Lyndon Johnson's Civil
Rights and Great Society programs extended the reach of government to the
protection of civil liberties and the redistribution of economic resources to
those who were most needy.
More
recently, Ronald Reagan's conservative agenda sought to limit the role of the
government in domestic affairs, reduce its regulatory activities, and cut back
on nationally run social programs. This agenda put an end to the era of
liberal, big government. The Republicans’ Contract with America would have
taken this a step further had Clinton not vetoed some of its more strident
proposals. Nonetheless, the welfare reform and the removal of farm subsidies
were two Republican proposals that Clinton supported.
In
foreign policy, George Washington’s warning to his fellow Americans not to
engage or become embroiled in entangling alliances held for most of the 18th
and 19th centuries, although the Monroe Doctrine did carve out an area of
hegemony for the United States within its own hemisphere. In the 20th century,
America began to get more involved in foreign affairs and international
politics. Theodore Roosevelt was primarily responsible for the building of the
Panama Canal, and Woodrow Wilson led the country into World War I with the hope
of making the world safe for democracy. But he failed to lead us out of it, as
the Senate refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles, the treaty that ended
the war and established the League of Nations. Franklin Delano Roosevelt led us
into World War II to fight Nazism in Europe and Japan’s military conquests in
Asia. Harry Truman’s containment policy recognized the danger posed by
Communism, first in Europe, then in China and in the rest of Asia. Dwight
Eisenhower’s mutually assured destruction (MAD) recognized the power of nuclear
weapons as a deterrent to war. Since the end of the Cold War, there has not
been one overarching policy, other than human rights and democratic principles,
that has guided U.S. foreign policy.
Q: Have
the rules governing presidential succession changed over the years?
A: New
laws and constitutional amendments have affected presidential succession. In
1947 Congress enacted the Presidential Succession Act, which delineated the
line of succession after the vice president, in the following order: speaker of
the house, president pro tempore of the Senate, and cabinet secretaries in
order of the creation of their respective departments, beginning with the
secretary of state.
The 25th
Amendment stipulates the procedures for the vice president temporarily assuming
the presidency if the president is unable to discharge the powers and duties of
his office, as well as the procedures for terminating the vice president as
acting president when the president is able resume his duties and
responsibilities.
Another
provision of the amendment states the procedures for filling the vice
presidency should it become permanently vacant through death, resignation, or
succession to the presidency. In such cases, the president would nominate a new
vice president who would then have to be approved by a majority vote of each
house of Congress.
Q: Are
the most popular U.S. presidents the most effective leaders?
A:
Popularity and leadership do not necessarily go hand in hand for U.S.
presidents. Popularity stems from heroic stature, good times, and the ability
to satisfy the wishes of the people at the moment. Leadership involves goal
setting, public education and mobilization of the populace, and a vision beyond
the here and now. Most importantly, to exercise leadership, a president needs a
crisis. Bad times are good times for the exercise of presidential power, unless
the president is blamed for the bad times. The American constitutional system
of separated powers and checks and balances inhibits strong leadership most of
the time and especially during good times.
Q: How
did presidents communicate with the American people before radio and
television?
A: Before
radio and television, there was not a lot of public communication between the
president and the American public. What little there was occurred in newspaper
accounts of them, as well as in campaign speeches and other presidential
addresses. Presidential candidates did not run their own political campaigns
for office until the end of the 19th century. Their parties ran campaigns on
their behalf.
The most
effective way to reach the public prior to radio and television was through
newspapers. Beginning in the 20th century, the White House became a focus of
media attention. Several large newspaper chains assigned reporters to cover the
president. William McKinley was the first president to have an official press
secretary; he also gave formal interviews to media representatives. Teddy
Roosevelt was the first president to give reporters a room in the White
House—something that all of his successors have likely regretted. Roosevelt
encouraged them to follow him around the country and to report on his speeches
and activities. So did Woodrow Wilson.
Franklin
Delano Roosevelt was the first president to use radio on a regular basis to
reach the entire country with his so-called “fireside chats,” which he gave
once or twice a year. Dwight D. Eisenhower was the first president to allow
television cameras into his press conferences, although the coverage was not
live. Transcripts were released after the conference. John F. Kennedy had the
first live press conference and the first to be televised to Europe via satellite.
Q: Why
can’t U.S. presidents get their way with Congress most of the time?
A: Each
member of the U.S. Congress is nominated and elected by a specific
constituency. Each member owes his or her principal allegiance to that
constituency, not to the president. Most members, in fact, earn a larger share
of the vote in their particular legislative districts than the president does,
when both are elected at the same time. Why then should these members follow
the president’s lead?
Under the
U.S. Constitution, presidents have very limited authority when dealing with
Congress. They can say no to Congress with conviction. Only about 4 percent of
all presidential vetoes have ever been overridden. But presidents have much
more difficulty persuading Congress to say yes to their proposals.
Presidents
must first get a bill introduced in Congress, then get it sent to supportive
Congressional committees for consideration, and then try to prevent some
committee members and lobbyists who do not like the proposed legislation from
adding crippling amendments or scuttling the bill entirely. Then presidents
need a favorable rule for consideration in the House of Representatives
followed by a majority vote.
In the
Senate at least 60 votes (out of 100 total) are needed to break a filibuster if
the opposition decides to engage in one. If the bill passes in different forms
in the House and Senate, a conference committee is needed to work out the
details, which must be approved by a new vote in each house. Throughout this
process, presidents must work to build public support to provide members of
Congress with political cover, if they need it, to vote for the president’s
proposal.
It is
difficult enough for a president to do all this when his party controls both
houses of Congress. But when this is not the case—which has been most of the
time since 1968—these tasks become nearly impossible. Often, the most favorable
result a president can hope for is a great battle; multiple, public
compromises; and an incremental solution. The most unfavorable result is no
movement on the proposal at all.
Q: Do
U.S. presidents have too much power on foreign policy matters?
A: If
U.S. presidents have too much power over foreign policy, it is only because the
U.S. Congress chooses not to exercise its constitutional powers or is unable or
unwilling to do so. A treaty initiated by the president requires a two-thirds
vote of approval in the Senate to win authorization; it can require a vote in
the House of Representatives as well if legislation to implement the treaty is
required. The president’s diplomatic appointments must also receive Senate
approval. Congress and Congress alone has the power to declare war, fund the
military, and maintain rules regulating the armed forces.
Q: How
have presidential candidates and presidents used the Internet?
A: The
use of the Internet is a recent phenomenon. It began in the 1990s. George
Herbert Walker Bush was the first president to have a computer terminal, but he
did not use it very often. In 1993, Bill Clinton authorized a White House Web
site. By the end of the Clinton administration, that site contained much of the
official data of the Clinton presidency, from presidential speeches to press
briefings and conferences, executive orders, proclamations, and legislative actions.
It also noted all presidential activities. The site has an easy-to-use search
engine and links to the rest of the government.
Both
Clinton and Republican candidate Robert Dole had campaign Web sites in 1996,
but they paled in comparison to the 2000 sites that were used by all
presidential candidates. These sites were used to present candidates’ positions
on the issues, raise money, mobilize volunteers, and generate enthusiasm for
the candidacies and campaigns.
Q: Do
U.S. presidents have too much or too little power?
A: For
some people, the answer to this question may depend on whether they support or
oppose what the president wants to do! In general, presidents have more power
in foreign affairs than in domestic affairs; they have more power in times of
crises than in ordinary times; and they have more power to say no in general,
and to the U.S. Congress in particular, than to say yes. They have some power
to influence the composition of the Supreme Court, if there are vacancies, but
much less power in affecting how and what the Court decides.
Given the
public’s desire for strong presidential leadership, the many roles we expect
presidents to perform, the promises presidential candidates make to get
elected, and the needs of the governmental system for a policy initiator,
coalition builder, and if successful, a policy implementer, presidents do not
have too much power. Most of the time they have too little power.
When Dick
Cheney, elected vice president in 2000, was chief of staff for Gerald R. Ford
in 1976, I asked him if he liked his job. He said, “I love it.” I then asked
him what he liked about it: the power, the interaction with the president and
other prominent people, or the impact he could have on world and national
events. “It is everything but the power,” he said. “When you are on the
outside, looking in, the White House seems like such a powerful place. But when
you are on the inside, looking out, all you are aware of are the constraints.”
Q: Should
presidents seek to be moral leaders, or should they focus on concrete policies,
such as the nation’s economic well-being?
A: The
U.S. president performs a number of roles. Chief policy-maker is one of them,
but setting a good example is another. We need direction from the president,
but we also like to look up to the president. Setting a moral example is part
of the president's job. Yet, if the impeachment of President Bill Clinton tells
us anything, it is that most Americans would rather have a strong leader in the
White House—someone who can fix the country's policy problems—than a saint.
President Jimmy Carter would have been reelected in 1980 if the American people
wanted a moral leader. At the time, however, most people wanted the economy to
improve and the American hostages in Iran released.
Q: Why
have some presidents been more successful with Congress, and what accounts for
their success?
A:
Presidential success with the United States Congress varies primarily with four
factors, only one of which is subject to much presidential control. These factors
are: the conditions, the partisan composition of Congress, the type of policy,
and the popularity, legislative, and communicative skills of the president.
Presidents
have more success with Congress in times of crisis and when their partisans
control both houses of Congress. Presidents have more influence in foreign
policy than in domestic policy. They usually have more influence if they are
popular and persuasive in the public arena, have a strong reputation in
Congress, and understand the intricacies of the legislative process.
The most
successful legislative presidents in the 20th century were Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, Lyndon Baines Johnson, and Ronald Reagan. All were able to get their
domestic programs enacted into law—programs that had a major impact on the
country in the decades that followed their presidencies.
Most
presidents are successful in saying no. Less than 5 percent of all presidential
vetoes have been overridden. It takes a two-thirds majority in both houses of
Congress to override a presidential veto.
Q: Does
the public have a right to know about the personal lives of candidates who are
running for high political offices?
A: The
news media has answered this question with a collective 'yes' by making
personal information about political candidates available. Such information
tends to increase the size of the news media's audience, since personal lives
and behavior seem to be more interesting to more people than are detailed
discussions of issues and policy. Many scholars would say that private
information should be available only if it is relevant to a person’s
performance in office. Was information about President Bill Clinton’s
relationship with White House aide Monica Lewinsky relevant to this
performance? Democrats and Republicans disagreed in their answers, but people
on both sides were interested in what the president did, which is why the press
kept reporting such material.
Q: Do
former presidents still receive protection from the secret service?
A: Former
presidents get a nice pension plus secret service protection for life. Their
spouses also receive protection, but their children do not. Former vice
presidents also get protection if they desire it. Richard Nixon is the only
president who voluntarily gave up his secret service protection—he hired
private security guards.
Q: Has
the study of the U.S. presidency changed in recent decades?
A: There
has been a lot of interest in and research on the presidency. Scholars have
utilized a variety of methods in studying the office. They continue to use case
studies to illustrate how presidencies work and make decisions. They have also
incorporated organization theory to look at the structure, functioning, and
processes that occur within the institution.
Ever
since Richard E. Neustadt's book, Presidential Power, was published in
1960, scholars have been concerned with the scope and limits of presidential
influence. They have sought to measure this influence in a variety of ways:
quantitatively, by analyzing congressional voting behavior, looking at
presidential popularity, and evaluating presidential vetoes and executive
orders; and qualitatively, by looking at decisions, speeches, and actions
through case and comparative studies. Some have even attempted to use formal
modeling, such as game theory, to discern rational decision-making and its
consequences.
Q: What
are swing voters and how can they affect election outcomes?
A: Swing
voters are people who may cast ballots for either major political party. They
tend to be people with weak or no partisan affiliation, people who vote more
for the person than for the parties. Usually, they are people who pay less
attention to campaigns, have less information about the issues, and are less
confident that they will vote at all. Frequently, swing voters will make up
their minds later in the campaign about whether to vote, and if so, for whom.
In close
elections, swing voters can be the deciding factor in determining the outcome.
That is why candidates tend to direct their appeals to these voters in the hope
of winning their votes. In the 2000 presidential election, for example, public
opinion polls indicated that many of the swing voters were located in the
Midwest. Both Democratic candidate Al Gore and Republican candidate George W.
Bush directed much of their advertising and personal campaign activities to
this section of the country.
Q: What
needs to be done during the transition from one U.S. presidential
administration to the next?
A: The
most important task during a transition is to begin the appointment process for
the new administration. When a new president takes over, he has about 6,700
executive appointments to make. About half of these are for part-time
positions, such as those of members of commissions and boards. Of the full-time
appointees, 1,200 require Senate consent. These include department secretaries,
agency heads, ambassadors, U.S. attorneys, and all the deputy and assistant
secretaries and administrators. Most of the political appointees who help the president
by serving in the White House or in other Executive Office of the President
(EOP) offices do not require Senate consent.
In
addition to getting his people in place and rewarding those who helped him win
the election, the new president must meet with “official Washington,”
especially members of Congress, to discuss his legislative priorities, and he
must be in touch with world leaders who wish to congratulate him and who want
to know of any changes in U.S. foreign policy. The new president must interact
with the media, which will report his every move and decision, as well as delve
into family and personal matters. Finally, he must display a 'presidential
presence' by reaching out to his opponent's supporters while placating his own.
A major public relations campaign emanating from the White House usually
reinforces this presence and also emphasizes policy.
Q: What
do vice presidents do?
A: The
vice president has only two functions that are spelled out in the United States
Constitution: to preside over the U.S. Senate and vote in case of a tie, and to
take over the functions of the president if the president is temporarily or
permanently disabled. In addition, vice presidents travel abroad on behalf of
the president and the country; they make political speeches and raise money for
their party; they get involved as advisers to the president and are regularly
briefed on domestic and international affairs; and they may be given special
assignments.
Vice
President Al Gore was involved in many policy areas during the administration
of President Bill Clinton. He supervised the administration’s appointments for
positions having to do with the environment; he was in charge of a national
performance review that aimed to make government leaner and more efficient; and
he took the lead in high-tech and Internet matters. He did not invent the
Internet, as he is often quoted as saying, but he did help the government get
up to speed on it: He got the departments and agencies to use it to communicate
to the public and got the White House to put all its official papers and
speeches on its Web site.
Q: How
large is the White House staff and what is its annual operating budget?
A: The
size of the White House staff varies with the president. The actual number of
full-time employees budgeted to the White House is determined by the U.S.
Congress, as is the amount of money appropriated to running it. During the last
several presidencies, there have been about 400 people who are considered
members of the president’s White House staff. The annual budget for running the
White House is in the neighborhood of $60 million. But that’s not all.
There are
a lot of people who work in the White House but are on the budgets of other
departments and agencies. The military aides and personnel who serve in the
White House are paid by the armed services. Secret Service and uniformed
service are formally attached to the Treasury Department and paid for out of
its budget. The people who have custody of the public papers, maintain the
grounds and the building, lead the tours—even those who oversee the computer
and telephone systems—are all paid for out of separate budgets from other
federal departments and agencies.
Finally,
the White House often has specific needs for policy development or implementation.
These needs can be met in the short run by assigning to the White House civil
servants who work in other parts of the government. In general, these civil
servants, often requested by name or by expertise, are detailed to the White
House for specific assignments that range in length from several months to
years. So the White House staff is much larger than it seems, and running it is
more expensive than it appears to be.
Q: How is
the White House organized?
A: How
the White House is organized reflects the way individual presidents do business
as well as the continuing needs and expectations that presidents fulfill. In
general, the White House staff numbers about 400 people who are budgeted to the
White House and about 100 to 200 people who are detailed to it from departments
and agencies for special assignments. These people are roughly divided into
three groups: policy, public relations, and personal staff.
The three
major policy groups—economic, domestic, and national security—are each headed
by an assistant to the president and a deputy assistant. The assistants and
deputy assistants have offices in the White House. The rest of the staffs are
located in the Old Executive Office Building. During the administration of Bill
Clinton, these policy staffs reported to an assistant chief of staff, who
reported to the chief of staff, who reported to the president.
There are
five outreach offices that are intended to serve the president's principal
constituencies. The office of communications, including the press secretary,
speechwriters, and researchers, serves the public. The office of legislative
affairs serves Congress, while the office of public affairs serves interest
groups. The office of intergovernmental affairs serves state and local
governments, and the office of political affairs serves the president’s
political party. Under Clinton, these outreach offices reported to another
assistant chief of staff.
The rest
of the staff helps the president with his day-to-day activities, including
appointment scheduling, travel planning, personnel issues, legal issues,
correspondence, and other matters. On paper, these staffs report to the staff
secretary who serves the president's chief of staff. In person, the chief of
staff or his or her assistants may be directly involved.
The chief
of staff has four functions: run the White House, advise the president, act as
a liaison between the president’s Cabinet and Congress, and oversee and react
to the political environment in which policymaking occurs. The chief of staff
usually meets with the president every morning, as does the national security
adviser. The vice president also has an office near the president’s in the
White House, as does the vice president’s chief of staff. The First Lady and
her staff are located in the East Wing of the White House.
Q: From
what I've read about the daily life of a US President, it sounds like a lot of
work and intense stress, without a hugely rewarding salary, or—often—the
ability to effect the changes they hoped for upon entering office. What is the
draw for a politician to want to be president? Do many presidents actually
enjoy the job while doing it? Did any recent President, whom you are aware of,
regret getting elected?
A: The
presidency can be hard work and involve long hours and great stress. Whether or
not the job gets to a president greatly depends on the individual’s personality
and approach to the job. By contemporary standards, Reagan did not work
extraordinary hours and slept well at night. George W. Bush does not seem to overtax
himself and so far has not let the job get to him. On the other hand, his
father and Bill Clinton worked all the time. Clinton loved it: the attention,
the challenge, the adulation, and the impact he made. His tough time has come
since he has been out of office.
The job
can be frustrating because there is a great gap (which presidential candidates
have helped enlarge) between what the public expects, what the presidential
candidate has promised, and what the president can actually deliver. Our system
of government was not intended to be dominated by one institution, much less
one person. The government consists of three branches and literally millions of
elected and appointed offices and public servants.
So what
is the inducement for running?
1. It is
considered the nation's top and most respected position.
2. It
matters who is president. A president can make a difference.
3. The
salary is not the top draw, but Congress just raised it to $400,000, and
presidents do very well after they leave office.
But
remember, those who run for elective office have huge ego needs they believe
the presidency can fulfill. Clinton wanted the job since he met John F. Kennedy
at the White House as a teenager. Few people would turn down the opportunity to
be president, even if it means running for two years for the job, a feat that
many of the candidates also enjoy.
The only
one I can think of who said “no thanks” was General Colin Powell, our current
secretary of state. Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge did not enjoy being
president. For Harding the job was too tough; Coolidge seemed depressed and
daydreamed a lot.
Q: If a
woman is elected president, what impact might it have?
A: The
election of a woman to the U.S. presidency would have a more symbolic than tangible
impact on the presidency and national politics. It would be viewed as a coming
of age for America, a fusion of the nation’s inspirational words, aspirations,
and deeds. It would be a nail in the coffin of bigotry, the ending of informal
qualifications based on gender, race, and religion, all of which bear no
relationship to the exercise of leadership skills and the ability to be a good
president.
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