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Overreach: Leadership in the Obama Presidency [Hardcover]

George C. Edwards
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

March 5, 2012

When Barack Obama became president, many Americans embraced him as a transformational leader who would fundamentally change the politics and policy of the country. Yet, two years into his administration, the public resisted his calls for support and Congress was deadlocked over many of his major policy proposals. How could this capable new president have difficulty attaining his goals? Did he lack tactical skills?

In Overreach, respected presidential scholar George Edwards argues that the problem was strategic, not tactical. He finds that in President Obama's first two years in office, Obama governed on the premise that he could create opportunities for change by persuading the public and some congressional Republicans to support his major initiatives. As a result, he proposed a large, expensive, and polarizing agenda in the middle of a severe economic crisis. The president's proposals alienated many Americans and led to a severe electoral defeat for the Democrats in the 2010 midterm elections, undermining his ability to govern in the remainder of his term.

Edwards shows that the president's frustrations were predictable and the inevitable result of misunderstanding the nature of presidential power. The author demonstrates that the essence of successful presidential leadership is recognizing and exploiting existing opportunities, not in creating them through persuasion. When Obama succeeded in passing important policies, it was by mobilizing Democrats who were already predisposed to back him. Thus, to avoid overreaching, presidents should be alert to the limitations of their power to persuade and rigorously assess the possibilities for obtaining public and congressional support in their environments.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

[A] clear, well-documented study of the limits on presidential power and influence. (Publishers Weekly )

A valuable addition to the understanding of US polity. (R. Balashankar Organiser )

In Overreach, Edwards applies 'lessons learned' from his previous work on presidential leadership to the Obama presidency. Edwards argues that presidents do not create political opportunities, but must identify political openings and capitalize on existing political opportunities. . . . A readable book that will find a home in undergraduate courses on the U.S. presidency. (Choice )

Overreach is a clear and instructive essay, which, with an impressive amount of data (polls, television audience statistics, Congressional voting, and so on), confirms the arguments Edwards has been making since 2003. (Aurélie Godet Books and Ideas.net )

From the Inside Flap

"George Edwards has written a cogently argued, data-driven analysis of the Obama administration's failure to appreciate the opportunities and limitations of exercising power in the American political system. In the process, Edwards shows the relevancy of his and other scholarship for presidents, their advisers, and serious students of the American presidency."--Stephen J. Wayne, Georgetown University

"George Edwards is our leading analyst of the probabilities of presidential power. He shows that presidents are most effective at the margins, when they exploit existing opportunities rather than when they try to build new coalitions. And when they succeed (as with Obamacare) they might well be careful what they wish for. This book is a superb analysis of Obama's leadership style, and is essential reading for White House counselors."--Richard Pious, Barnard College

"In this provocative, accessible, and timely volume, George Edwards presents a sobering analysis not just of the Obama presidency, but of the very possibility of transformative political change. Overreach constitutes a valuable reminder that what the public expects of presidents, and what presidents expect of themselves, often amounts to a gross exaggeration of what is genuinely possible. Moreover, this book argues, presidents who proceed undaunted risk paying a significant political cost."--William G. Howell, University of Chicago

"Presidents facing criticism or difficulties--which is to say, all of them--normally blame their problems on a failure to communicate rather than their own policy choices. With a special focus on Barack Obama, though, Overreach shows us that presidential choices are the key, since attempts to use communication skills to change hearts and minds are largely doomed to failure. Fluently written, this book provides both a good read and important claims to consider."--Andrew Rudalevige, Dickinson College


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (March 5, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 069115368X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691153681
  • Product Dimensions: 1.1 x 6.5 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #752,561 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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In "Overreach: Leadership in the Obama Presidency", author & noted presidential scholar George C. Edwards III continues and applies the ideas that he championed in his previous book The Strategic President: Persuasion and Opportunity in Presidential Leadership. This is an impressive, detailed, critical analysis of the political landscape, presidential agendas, decision-making and its consequences focusing on presidents in general and specifically the first-term Obama years. "Overreach" occurs when a president conceives and proposes major programs that lack support from the public and Congress and then attempts to implement them through the power of persuasion, persistence, and other strategic and tactical political means. When this fails, the administration could suffer a loss of momentum and take on an air of ineffectiveness. The author's idea is that presidents should, indeed must, recognize and exploit opportunities already in existence on their political landscape and skillfully orchestrate the implementation of these more achievable, but lesser programs. To support this thesis, Professor Edwards begins with examples of President Franklin Roosevelt and his "court-packing" plan which adversely affected the "New Deal", Bill Clinton's "health care" agenda which wasted political capital, and G.W. Bush's heavily-promoted but failed "social security reform" attempt: all prime examples of presidential 'overreach'.

Barack Obama's 'overreach' attempts were in trying to gather both public and bipartisan Congressional support for implementing multiple, wide-ranging strategic programs in the areas such as the environment, energy, health care, education, banking and mortgage reform, closing down Guantanamo, immigration, and much more, while winding down 2 wars (but ramping up in Afghanistan) in the midst of "a fiscal crisis, a financial crisis, and an economic crisis" to quote David Axelrod. Professor Edwards supports his theories with his incisive interpretations of multiple tables of polling data, maps, and charts. Beyond this there are some telling points that are made that may come as a shock to many. Along the way we find issues and factors affecting different presidential administrations, such as: the Obama agenda and leadership style, partisan balance vs ideological balance, ideological identification vs issue attitudes, polarized states, focusing public attention, framing public issues, the importance of opportunity structure, voting for change while remaining skeptical, the familiar high partisan gaps between parties, Obama's "advancing tide" theory, "droppers" and "switchers", and the vagaries of partisan polarization. The reader has the advantage of seeing the political landscape during Obama's first term, the run up to Obama's second Presidential campaign, and knowing what transpired after the election, which reinforces how political sentiments can shift. The author makes a strong case for his thesis with many examples in this scholarly political science analysis which is both engrossing and enlightening, with some surprising 'myth-busting' assertions backed up by his data. Highly Recommended! Four and a half ENGROSSING Stars! (248 pages, includes tables, charts, and maps. Reviewed in text and text-to-speech Kindle modes.)
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