Get Out of the Way: Joe Biden, the U.S. Congress, and Executive-Centered Partisanship During the President’s First Year in Office

Author:

Jacobs Nicholas F.1,Milkis Sidney M.2

Affiliation:

1. Colby College , Waterville , ME , USA

2. University of Virginia , Charlottesville , VA , USA

Abstract

AbstractOn the campaign trail and at his inauguration, Joe Biden pledged, above all else, to be a uniter to restore the soul of America. At the end of his first year in office, many campaign promises have been met, but unity has not been one. Far from transcending partisanship as promised, Biden has embraced the levers of presidential discretion and power inherent within the modern executive office to advance partisan objectives. He is not just a victim of polarization, but actively contributes to it. This is not unexpected. Rather it is the culmination of a decades-long reorientation within both major parties: the rise of an executive-centered party-system, with Democrats and Republicans alike relying on presidents and presidential candidates to pronounce party doctrine, raise campaign funds, campaign on behalf of their partisan brethren, mobilize grass roots support, and advance party programs. Like Barack Obama and Donald Trump before him, Biden has aggressively used executive power to cut the Gordian knot of partisan gridlock in Congress. Even pandemic politics is not immune to presidential partisanship; in fact, it has accentuated the United States’ presidency-centered democracy, which weakens the public resolve to confront and solve national problems.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science

Reference73 articles.

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2. Baird, R. 2021. “Inside the Democrats’ Battle to Build Back Better.” The New Yorker, https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-political-scene/inside-the-democrats-battle-to-build-back-better (accessed January 1, 2022).

3. Barrón-López, L., and C. Cadelgo. 2021. How Biden’s Sherpa, Steve Ricchetti, Scored the Big Deal. Politico. July 30. Also available at https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/30/biden-sherpa-richetti-501730.

4. Bauer, B., and J. Goldsmith. 2021. Congress Should Seize this Chance to Gets its Power Back. Politico Magazine. October 5. Also available at https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/10/05/congress-protecting-our-democracy-act-power-515040.

5. Beckman, M. N. 2010. Pushing the Agenda: Presidential Leadership in Lawmaking, 1953–2004. New York: Cambridge University Press.

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