The Presidency and Organized Interests: White House Patterns of Interest Group Liaison
Mark A. Peterson
American Political Science Review, 1992, vol. 86, issue 3, 612-625
Abstract:
Studies of the relationship between the presidency and organized interests generally focus on presidential assistants and their communications with the interest group community. I take a different perspective. Based on presidential strategic interests and choices illuminated for several administrations through interviews with White House officials, four kinds of interest group liaison are identified: governing party, consensus building, outreach, and legitimization. These approaches are then empirically evaluated for the Reagan White House using interviews with Reagan's staff and the responses of several hundred interest group leaders to 1980 and 1985 surveys of national voluntary associations. Like the Carter administration after its first year, the Reagan White House initially emphasized “liaison as governing party” built on exclusive and programmatic ties to groups. A less activist legislative agenda and new circumstances later shifted the emphasis of the Reagan and Bush administrations to other forms of interest group liaison.
Date: 1992
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:86:y:1992:i:03:p:612-625_09
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