The Good Ruler: From Herbert Hoover to Richard Nixon

Capa
Rutgers University Press, 1988 - 202 páginas

Which American presidents have been good? Which have been bad? Experts on the presidency have never been able to agree on their assessments. Bruce Kuklick suggests that historians and political scientists have approached the problem of defining successful leadership without adequately considering the essential factor. Instead of trying to evaluate which presidents set consistent and worthy policies and brought them to fruition, Kuklick asks us to pay more attention to how the American people feel about their presidents. The citizenry and its emotional responses are sued as the measure of a successful president, rather than the ostensibly rational appraisals of scholars.

Applying this measure to the presidents from the Depression to Watergate, Kuklick begins by tracing the way in which Franklin Roosevelt established the parameters of the inspirational presidency and how his success shaped the study of political history. He then explores the triumphs of Eisenhower and Kennedy and contrasts these triumphs too the failures of Hoover, Truman, Johnson, and Nixon. The ability of leaders to win the respect and admiration of the citizenry is, for Kuklick, the crucial touchstone by which the success of a president is judged.

To highlight this position that is not useful for historians to justify the merits or failures of a president by pointing out what he would have done had he lived longer or in a different era, Kiklick includes and entertaining and enlightening fable, an imaginary view of historical events: Nixon is elected in 1960, giving a youthful tone to the White House until his assassination in 1967; Kennedy is elected in 1968 but resigns after he is accused of misconduct. The fable demonstrates that the specific events are less important than a president's ability to evoke a positive emotional response from the citizenry. The Good Ruler analyzes our recent political history without partisan bias and examines the basic premises of American democratic politics.

 

Índice

The Inspirational Presidency
26
Lessons of the Master
52
Roosevelt and the Structure of Politics
67
A Problem of Authority
82
19531960
107
Let Us Reason Together
134
Nixon and the Watergate Scandal
154
Direitos de autor

Palavras e frases frequentes

Acerca do autor (1988)

Bruce Kuklick is the Professor of the Humanities at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Churchmen and Philosophers: From Jonathan Edwards to John Dewey; The United States and the Division of Germany; and other books and articles.

Informação bibliográfica