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Organizing the Presidency

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Examining how the White House works - or doesn't - before and after Trump.Donald Trump has reinvented the presidency, transforming it from a well-oiled if sometimes cumbersome institution into what has often seemed to be a one-man show. But even Trump's unorthodox presidency requires institutional support, from a constantly rotating White House staff and cabinet who have sought to carry out - and sometimes resist - the president's direct orders and comply with his many tweets. Nonetheless, the Trump White House still exhibits many features of its predecessors over the past eight decades. When Franklin D. Roosevelt was inaugurated, the White House staff numbered fewer than fifty people, and most federal department were lightly staffed as well. As the United States became a world power, the staff of the Executive Office increased twentyfold, and the staffing of federal agencies blossomed comparably. In the fourth edition of Organizing the Presidency, a landmark volume examining the presidency as an institution, Stephen Hess and James P. Pfiffner argue that the successes and failures of presidents from Roosevelt through Trump have resulted in large part from how the president deployed and used White House staffers and other top officials responsible for carrying out Oval Office policy. Drawing on a wealth of analysis and insight, Organizing the Presidency addresses best practices for managing a presidency that is itself a bureaucracy.
Stephen Hess is a senior fellow emeritus in Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution. His many public service roles include serving on the White House staff during the Eisenhower and Nixon presidencies and as adviser to Presidents Ford and Carter. He is the author of numerous books published by the Brookings Institution Press, including Bit Player, The Professor and the President, and America's Political Dynasties. James P. Pfiffner is University Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University. He has written or edited over a dozen books on the presidency and American government, including The Strategic Presidency: Hitting the Ground Running, Understanding the Presidency, and Power Play: The Bush Presidency and the Constitution.
1. The Evolving Modern Presidency 2. Franklin D. Roosevelt 3. Harry S. Truman 4. Dwight D. Eisenhower 5. John F. Kennedy 6. Lyndon B. Johnson 7. Richard M. Nixon, Gerald R. Ford 8. Jimmy Carter, Ronald W. Reagan 9. George H. W. Bush, William J. Clinton 10. George W. Bush 11. Barack H. Obama 12. Donald J. Trump Conclusion: Fourteen Presidencies Acknowledgments Notes Index
"Notable for its broad coverage, considerable insight, and graceful writing."--Presidential Studies Quarterly "This is the first book on the presidency that leaves readers with the feeling that they have read a comprehensive treatment of the subject."--Annals of the American Academy
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