Available Formats
The President as Party Leader
By (Author) James W. Davis
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd March 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
353.0323
Hardback
248
In spite of all that has been written on the US presidency, no book before this has come forth in the 20th century on the president as party leader. A respected senior scholar, James W. Davis has studied the presidency for more than 40 years and has been on the campaign trail with candidates and incumbents and at national party meetings. He has written a lively text that is tailor-made for courses on the presidency, political parties, and elections. This is good reading for everyone who is interested in American government and politics and who wants to understand what makes a president a strong leader. The history and political analysis shows how presidents and political parties need each other and demonstrates why presidents must understand and be immersed in the political process to be effective. The text examines the emergence of the party leader through nominating and general election campaigns, presidential and congressional party interaction, eras of divided government, as well as the relationship between the president and the party's national committee. It also presents the role of the presidential party and of the president in his public roles and then discusses reforms that may strengthen the president as an executive and as a party leader.
Davis presents a thorough rundown of various party-based plans for reforming the American system.-Journal of American History
"Davis presents a thorough rundown of various party-based plans for reforming the American system."-Journal of American History
JAMES W. DAVIS is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Western Washington University. He is the author of The American Presidency: A New Perspective (1987), National Conventions in an Age of Party Reform (Greenwood, 1983), and Presidential Primaries: Road to the White House (Greenwood, 1980).