Public Policy and Administration in the Age of Donald Trump
Schultz David ()
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Schultz David: Professor, Department of Political Science, Hamline University, 1586 Hewitt Ave, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA 55104
Central European Journal of Public Policy, 2022, vol. 16, issue 1, 14-26
Abstract:
Donald Trump’s presidency produced a few legislative victories. Instead, as with his predecessors, the Trump presidency had to rely more on executive orders and other actions to move its agenda. But even this unilateral approach produced fewer results than his supporters hoped for or his detractors feared. This article will examine public policymaking and administration under the Trump Administration. It will argue that while the 2016 electoral victories for Republicans gave Donald Trump an enormous opportunity to move his political agenda, several factors prevented that from occurring. These factors include indecision on the part of the Trump presidency whether to move a policy agenda or cripple the administrative state; denial of personal responsibility for policies or actions, a failure to understand the constitutional underpinnings of American politics and policymaking, especially when it comes to administrative agency action; intra-party disputes; party polarization; ethical, legal, and impeachment issues; governmental inexperience; and an overall inability to appreciate the differences between the American presidency and business leadership. Overall, the article describes the political context of the Trump presidency and to explain how it, the structure of American government, and the overall indifference or failure of the Trump administration to understand how the government works rendered this presidency far less effective than it could have been. The lesson of the Trump presidency for the USA and other states is despite rhetoric and claims that outsiders or nontraditional leaders can affect governmental and policy change, they are often ineffectual or dangerous.
Keywords: Trump presidency; Public Policy and Administration; Presidential Power; Executive Orders; Ethics; Covid-19; Pandemic; Foreign Policy; Immigration (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:vrs:cejopp:v:16:y:2022:i:1:p:14-26:n:3
DOI: 10.2478/cejpp-2022-0002
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