Loyal Followers,
I'm pretty sure I did rather poorly on the most recent quiz. As such, I will probably have to take this post a little more seriously...
The President should probably act primarily as a trustee. The President is chosen by the people (or at least the electors that they choose), and his job involves sophisticated issues that the voters do not have the time or inclination to study at length. Therefore, the President must make his own decisions, with the help of his conscience, his intellect, and his advisors.
Naturally, sometimes the people will be particularly passionate about an issue, especially issues with which they are quite familiar, such as education. In these situations, the President will be forced to act as a delegate, in accordance with his constituent's wishes. Therefore, ultimately all Presidents are politicos. However, I would prefer to see Presidents make principled decisions, even when they are unpopular, more often than most Presidents do. In the modern era, thanks to the "permanent campaign" that politics has become, the executive branch seems to govern based on polls, at least on issues that really resonate with the public. As I said, all Presidents and most politicians are politicos, but they seem to lean too far to the delegate side of the equation.
On certain issues, all Presidents need to act as delegates. For example, I just denounced the tendency of the modern President to only do what is popular, but in 2008, when President Bush supported the bank bailout in opposition to public opinion, he did the right thing. It hurts a little bit to say this, because I think Bush was generally a terrible President, but the bank bailout was good policy. For example, in January 2009, 61% of Americans opposed completing TARP by spending the rest of the money allocated for the program (http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2009/01/16/poll-tarp-not-working-dont-spend-more-americans-say/). TARP was necessary, even though nobody liked the idea, and it kept our economy from falling into a ditch. Times are rough now, but they could be a lot worse. Bush's actions in 2008 seem to confirm the notion that Presidents are unlikely to respond to public opinion when they are quite unpopular, as Bush was in 2008. Bush could do whatever he wanted, because it didn't really matter, people hated him regardless.
When it comes to the Presidency, we really don't need our leader to be descriptively representative. The Presidency is a unique office. We have one President at a time, and he is the most powerful person in the world. He must necessarily be, as Jon Stewart put it, "embarrassingly superior" to most Americans. I want my President to be unusually smart, compassionate, and principled. If he is a man of the people, that will probably help him be more compassionate, but I don't need him to be the kind of guy I want to get a beer with. What I'm looking for from a President is substantive representation. The President needs to represent the entire country, and no individual could do that in a descriptive sense. Finally, I think he should focus most of all on representing the disadvantaged. The people to whom the government has the most responsibility are those who are down on their luck. This especially includes those under government custody: prisoners and other institutionalized people. Luckily for the middle and upper classes, disadvantaged people don't vote in large numbers, so this remains an unlikely prospect.
Love,
FKW
Interesting view. I like your reference at the end about under-represented groups in the government. The voice of the underpriviliged , which the government should be worrying about the most, isn't represented in the polls or elections. So, if the pres. was to act as a delegate, those groups again would be under-represented. So, maybe acting as a trustee would be beneficial to the poor and "those down on their luck", because he can represent them, even though they arent the majority.
ReplyDeleteFrancis,
ReplyDeleteI have commented about this on a few of the other blogs, but how is the President to know when it is ok for him to be a trustee and when he must be a delegate. It would be a difficult thing for a President to go against what he thinks best, risking the future of the nation and his legacy as a President, and follow popular will. Therefore, more discussion is needed regarding when the President must yield to popular sentiment.
Presidential personality seems to play a large role in your assessment of presidential representation. You said you would like the President to be "unusually smart, compassionate, and principled." I agree that these are things the President should be, but I can recognize that they do not always possess these qualities. I'm curious as to how this affects your assessment. If the President does not possess these qualities, should he become more like a delegate or still remain first and foremost a trustee?
ReplyDelete