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43 Presidential Stud. Q. 1 (2013)

handle is hein.journals/pstlssqty43 and id is 1 raw text is: 






ARTICLES






            Presidential Position Taking and the

                       Puzzle of Representation



                              MATTHEW ESHBAUGH-SOHA
                                    University of North Texas

                                BRANDON ROTTINGHAUS
                                      University of Houston


           A significant debate rages in the literature. Although going public success is a function of
      mass public support for a policy, presidents respond to partisan liberalism in their public rhetoric.
      This presents a puzzle: how do presidents reconcile their need to target policies that are popular with
      the mass public to go public successfully, when they respond primarily to partisan opinion in their
      speeches? Our comparison of the president's policy proposals from 1989 through 2008 with both
      centrist andpartisan public opinion reveals that presidents are more partisan than centrist in their
      policy priorities, which adds weight to the partisan representation side of this debate.


      The  president's representational  responsibilities are unique and  varied. Because a
 national constituency elects the president, the centrist model of representation contends
 that presidents must  respond  to  and lead the  entire nation. Woodrow Wilson (1961,
 67-68) observed  this when he  wrote that as political leader of the nation, the president
 is representative of no constituency but of the whole  people. James  MacGregor   Burns
 (1973, 106) echoed  this perception: the President is custodian of popular safety, national
 destiny, and the conscience  of the people. Consistent  with  the centrist view of repre-
 sentation, numerous  scholars have found  that presidents are highly responsive to changes
 in national public mood  (Erikson, MacKuen, and Stimson 2002; Jacobs 1992; Stimson,
 Erikson, and MacKuen 1995), respond to the national public concerns about foreign and
 economic  issues (Cohen  1999), and respond  to national public preferences conditionally,
 by issue area, popularity, and  the president's electoral cycle (Canes-Wrone   and  Shotts
 2004; Rottinghaus   2006).


      Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha is associate professor of political science at the University of North Texas, whose research
interests include the presidenc, media, and public opinion. He is coauthor of Breaking through the Noise.
      Brandon Rottinghaus is associate professor and the Senator Don Henderson Endowed Chair at the University of
Houston. He is author of The Provisional Pulpit.
      AUTHORS'   NOTE:  We thank Paul Collins and an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments. We appreciate
Jun-deh Wu's assistance with data collection.

Presidential Studies Quarterly 43, no. 1 (March)  1
©  2013 Center for the Study of the Presidency

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