The Rhetorical Presidency: New EditionModern presidents regularly appeal over the heads of Congress to the people at large to generate support for public policies. The Rhetorical Presidency makes the case that this development, born at the outset of the twentieth century, is the product of conscious political choices that fundamentally transformed the presidency and the meaning of American governance. Now with a new foreword by Russell Muirhead and a new afterword by the author, this landmark work probes political pathologies and analyzes the dilemmas of presidential statecraft. Extending a tradition of American political writing that begins with The Federalist and continues with Woodrow Wilson’s Congressional Government, The Rhetorical Presidency remains a pivotal work in its field. |
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For Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, at the turn of the twentieth century
, informality consisted simply in speaking directly to the people and in disavowing
the constitutional mores that prevented presidents from “going public.
If the people cannot come together, then even the powers of the rhetorical
presidency cannot make the Constitution work. ... step toward liberating the
president from constitutional constraints by abolishing the constitutional niceties
altogether.
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