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Thomas Jefferson and Executive Power
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Table of Contents

1. 'The execution of laws is more important than the making of them': reconciling executive energy with democracy; 2. Executive power and the Virginia executive; 3. Executive power and the constitution of 1787; 4. 'To place before mankind the common sense of the subject': declarations of principle; 5. The real revolution of 1800: Jefferson's transformation of the inaugural address; 6. To 'produce a union of the powers of the whole': Jefferson's transformation of the appointment and removal powers; 7. The Louisiana Purchase; 8. To 'complete their entire union of opinion': the twelfth amendment as amendment to end all amendments; 9. 'To bring their wills to a point of union and effect': declarations and presidential speech; 10. Development and difficulties.

Promotional Information

This book outlines how Thomas Jefferson resolved the tension between contingency and a written constitution by proposing an executive that would be both strong and democratic.

About the Author

Jeremy D. Bailey is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Duquesne University. He was the co-winner of the 2004 APSA E. E. Schattschneider Award for best dissertation in American politics written in 2002 or 2003.

Reviews

"Jefferson was acutely sensitive to the potential, even inevitable, contradiction between the exercise of presidential power and respect for popular democracy. As president he attempted their reconciliation, simultaneously practicing and innovating a strikingly original theory of politics. In the process, as Jeremy D. Bailey thoroughly and convincingly demonstrates, Jefferson created one of the strongest and most enduring ideational bulwarks of the modern presidency." Richard Bensel, Cornell University "Jeremy Bailey has crafted an original understanding of executive leadership in the thought and practice of Thomas Jefferson, locating that praxis as an integral element of Jeffersonian constitutionalism. In doing so, Bailey pushes past conventional paradoxical frames-a strict constitutionalist whose political ambition and opportunism undercut that same constitutionalism. What emerges instead is a fresh portrait of an iconic American political leader, one engaged in a coherent project to reconcile the conflicting requirements of discretionary action, popular consent, and fundamental law, one committed to realizing a unified vision of constitutional democratic leadership. Along the way, Bailey also manages to situate Jeffersonian era innovations within the line of historical predicates leading to the development of the modern presidency and its repertoire of signature practices and justifications. This book is engaging, well researched, and well written. In all, it stands as an important contribution to a vast literature, one that can be fruitfully read by students of presidential leadership, American political development, and American constitutional thought." Scott C. James, University of California, Los Angeles "A powerful, shrewd, and original study of Jefferson's idea of executive power, shown in theory and application. Jeremy Bailey covers the whole realm of the presidency in a book all students of American politics will want to read." Harvey Mansfield, Harvard University "Jeremy Bailey's important new book will transform our understanding of Jefferson's presidency. By showing how Jefferson forged powerful new links between president and people and democratized prerogative powers, Bailey clarifies a complicated, confusing, and crucially important dimension of Jefferson's career. Thomas Jefferson and Executive Power also exposes and illuminates fundamental and enduring tensions in American constitutionalism. Bailey's book is an invaluable-and timely-contribution to the literature." Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia "Was there a Revolution in the United States in 1800, as Thomas Jefferson claimed? In contrast with Henry Adams and nearly all historians since, Jeremy D. Bailey thinks that there was, and he makes a powerful case in Jefferson's defense, arguing that as President he articulated in both theory and practice a new understanding of the executive power, strengthening the presidential office by making the executive the supreme exponent of popular opinion and by asserting broad executive discretion while deliberately making it responsible to popular judgment." Paul A. Rahe, University of Tulsa "Lucid and systematic, Thomas Jefferson and Executive Power is indispensable for understanding how the American presidency built on democratic thought. With inspiring rhetoric and shrewd management, President Jefferson solved the problem of linking the president to the popular will by becoming the 'custodian of public opinion.' He built a presidency that was both strong and democratic, shaping the office all his successors have inherited." David Robertson, University of Missouri - St. Louis "To find consistency and integrity in Jefferson's approach to executive power is no mean feat. But this book delivers much more. Jeremy Bailey's analysis of Jefferson is an exploration of the different ways in which presidential power can be asserted and justified. By asking us to consider the difference between Jefferson's efforts to root presidential power in public opinion and Hamilton's efforts to root it in the constitutional text he speaks to some of the most pressing issues of our day." Stephen Skowronek, Yale University "Thomas Jefferson was not only an important president. He was also an important theorist of the presidency. Jeremy Bailey has provided a much needed and insightful study of Jefferson's thought on executive power. It sheds light on the early republic, and on our own." Keith Whittington, Princeton University "Jeremy Bailey sets out to correct a very old misapprehension about Jefferson and executive powers, to wit, that Jefferson was an enemy to an energetic and strong executive-in theory at least. Bailey persuasively shows that Jefferson had a theory of executive strength that (more or less) matched his practice, but that it was quite a different theory and practice from that great champion of executive power, Alexander Hamilton. Bailey persuasively agues that Jefferson first built a strong executive on democratic grounds, thus anticipating the transformation in the Presidency usually attributed to Andrew Jackson. At a time when we are once again pondering the nature of executive powers and limits, this is a book well worth the attention of all citizens." Michael Zuckert, University of Notre Dame "Bailey crafts an innovative, atypical, controversial view of Jefferson's exercise of executive power ... pushes aside the traditional portrayals of Jefferson ... adds a timely piece to the puzzle of presidential power, and provides important new scholarship about the iconic Jefferson." Choice

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