Ideology and Ideologues in the Modern Presidency
2012; Wiley; Volume: 42; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/j.1741-5705.2012.04015.x
ISSN1741-5705
Autores Tópico(s)Social Policy and Reform Studies
ResumoIn this article, a theoretically informed and historically grounded perspective on ideology and ideologues is developed to address a paradox: while presidents play a central role in articulating socially diffuse ideologies, such as the soft‐Statism of the N ew D eal or the anti‐Statism championed by today's R epublican P arty, few administrations have been hospitable to ideologues, the T rue B elievers who develop ideologies in the first place and are dedicated to their implementation. While institutional inducements to the presidential employment of ideologues have grown throughout the modern presidential era, differential inducements to their influence have been critical in explaining when, and how, both ideologues and ideology have intersected with the modern presidency. These differential inducements are exogenous crises, the regime characteristics of each presidency, and the personal traits of presidents. The interplay of these factors is charted from F ranklin D elano R oosevelt (or FD R) through the O bama administration.
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