How have ideologues - people drawn to politics by the force of ideas - influenced presidential administrations and even the presidency itself? In Ideologues and Presidents Thomas Langston approaches this question through case studies of three key presidents whose programs changed the direction of the modern domestic agenda. In chapters on Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, and Ronald Reagan, Langston illustrates the important role of ideologues in national politics. In an epilogue on the Bush presidency, Langston demonstrates that ideologues, though they are often overlooked, are now too powerful to be kept out of even the most anti-ideological administrations.
For Langston, these "people of ideas" form a class of political actors distinct not only from pragmatic professional politicians but also from nonideological "experts," with whom ideologues compete for power. Because they are appointed to their governmental positions, ideologues are not directly accountable to the electorate, but report only to the president himself. Whether liberal or conservative, Langston argues, they are a creative yet destructive force in policy making. During the "New Deal" and the "Great Society," strong political parties helped maintain a balance in policy making between interests and ideas. By the time of the Reagan administration, ideologues faced fewer partisan obstacles to turning private dogma into public policy. And the next president who decides to rewrite the nation's domestic agenda, Langston concludes, will likely give ideologues even greater power.
Drawing on archival material, personal interviews, oral histories, government documents, and other primary sources, Langston presents the evidence from a variety of theoretical perspectives - among them, party-systems and de-alignment theory, "new class" theory, and anthropological approaches to ideology. With contemporary presidents increasingly dependent on the advice of unelected "people of ideas," Ideologues and Presidents provides an especially timely and provocative look at an issue with serious consequences for the future of American democracy.
Ideologues and Presidents argues that ideologues have been gaining influence in the modern presidency.
Explores the historical relationship between presidential ideology, policymaking, and governance.
The presidential leadership in America can and does make a great deal of difference as to what is debated and eventually legislated.
In this concise, readable, but comprehensive text, Steven E. Schier and Todd E. Eberly introduce students to this contentious subject through an in-depth look at the ideological foundations of the contemporary American political machine of ...
"Renowned scholar Stephen Skowronek's insights have fundamentally altered our understanding of the American presidency. His seminal works have identified broad historical patterns in American politics and explained the dynamics at...
This groundbreaking book presents a new understanding of ideological change. It shows how and why America's political parties have evolved.
An impressive mythology envelops Thabo Mbeki, Nelson Mandela's successor to the South African presidency. But key questions arise: Does he have an ideology? If so, what informs it, and how...
The members also chose Alan Bovay, Jebediah Bowen, Amos Loper, Abram Thomas, and Jacob Woodruff as the committee of the new Republican Party.14 The other person involved in the foundation of the Republican Party is John C. Fremont.
Originally published by Winthrop Publishers in 1976, this volume provides a critical examination of the contribution of the New Politics to continuity and change in the American electorate.
Box-Steffensmeier, Janet, Kathleen Knight, & Lee Sigelman. 1998. “The Interplay of Macroideology and Macropartisanship: A Time ... Carmines, Edward G. & Michael Berkman. 1994. “Ethos, Ideology, and Partisanship: Exploring the Paradox of ...