Empowering the White House
Governance under Nixon, Ford, and Carter
Karen M. Hult and Charles E. Walcott
January 2003
264 pages, 6 x 9
Studies in Government and Public Policy
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1298-7, $40.00
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1299-4, $19.95
One of Choice Magazine's Outstanding Academic Titles for 2005
On
the surface the new president seems to inherit an empty house,
Hugh Heclo, a recognized expert on American democratic institutions,
has noted. In fact, he enters an office already shaped and
crowded by other peoples desires. Empowering the
White House examines how Richard Nixon entered that crowded
Oval Office in 1969 yet managed to change it in a way that augmented
the power of the presidency and continues to influence into the
twenty-first century how his successors have governed.
Nixons White House is perhaps best remembered for the growth
in the size of the staff, which operated under the supposed iron
fist of H. R. Haldeman. But more important than size and management
style to the character of the Nixon White House were the assigned
tasks, complexity, and dynamics of the burgeoning staff. Faced with
hostile majorities in Congress and executive branch careerists assumed
to be committed to a Democratic agenda, Nixon sought to control
his political fate by engaging more actively than earlier presidents
in public relations and the mobilization of support. At the command
and under the control of the Oval Office, the staff carried out
assignments designed to fulfill Nixons aims.
This theoretically informed and well-researched study explains
how Nixon changed and expanded the institutionalized presidency
and how that affected the Ford and Carter administrations. Nixon
ushered in a new stage in the modern presidency by organizing and
using his increasingly complex staff in new ways that have persisted
beyond the 1970s to this day. To a greater degree than any predecessor,
Nixon systematized outreach, legal advice, and policy formulation.
His White House staffing, then, has come to be regarded as a standard
model that influences incoming presidents regardless of party
affiliation.
Leavening this organizational study are revealing accounts of how
the Nixon, Ford, and Carter staffs operated behind the scenes in
the West Wing. Anyone needing to know how the White House worked
during those presidenciesor how it has worked sincewill
find this book invaluable.
Theoretically informed and archivally rich, this important
book provides a welcome and much anticipated follow-up to the
authors previous award winning study.--John P.
Burke, author of The Institutional Presidency
Expands and strengthens the authors grand project
analyzing change and variation in the White House office. . .
. Indispensable for understanding the mature modern presidency.--Peri
E. Arnold, author of Making the Managerial Presidency
A gracefully written and essential study that sheds considerable
light on the operations of the modern presidency.--Melvin
Small, author of The Presidency of Richard Nixon
An important contribution to our understanding of how the
White House came to be what it is today.--James P. Pfiffner,
author of The Strategic Presidency
KAREN M. HULT and CHARLES E. WALCOTT are professors
of political science at Virginia Tech and coauthors of Governing
Public Organizations and Governing the White House: From
Hoover Through LBJ, winner of the APSAs Richard E. Neustadt
Award.
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