The Clinton Scandal and the Future of American Government

Capa
Mark J. Rozell, Clyde Wilcox
Georgetown University Press, 24 de mar. de 2000 - 292 páginas

The Clinton scandal consumed the better part of a year of American public life, bitterly dividing the nation and culminating in a constitutional crisis. In this book, thoughtful, nonpartisan essays provide an insightful and lasting analysis of one of the major political events of our time.

Here leading scholars explore the long-reaching constitutional and political implications of the scandal: how it will affect the presidency, the law, and the political process. A first group of chapters considers effects of the scandal on institutions: the presidency, Congress, the courts, the independent counsel statute, executive privilege, and the impeachment process itself. A second section addresses political factors: public opinion, the media, and presidential character and personality. A concluding essay broadly examines the implications of the scandal for governance.

These far-reaching essays address such issues as risks posed to Congressional political careers, the prospect of future presidents being subject to civil suits, the pros and cons of Kenneth Starr's investigation, the role of the media in breaking and then shaping the story, and ways of reforming the system to handle the unacceptable private behavior of future presidents.

A provocative book for readers concerned with how our government copes with such a challenge, and an essential reader for courses on the presidency or American government, this collection will stand the tests of both time and rigorous analysis.

 

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Conteúdo

The Presidency The Clinton Crisis and Its Consequences
1
The Congress The Politics of Impeachment
18
The Courts The Perils of Paula
40
The Independent Counsel Statute
60
Executive Privilege in the Clinton Scandal
81
Below the Law?
100
Scandal Time The Clinton Impeachment and the Distraction of American Politics
119
The Impeachment and Acquittal of President William Jefferson Clinton
142
Public Opinion The Paradoxes of Clintons Popularity
171
The Media The New Media and the Lure of the Clinton Scandal
195
Presidential Personality The Clinton Legacy
211
Presidential Character Multidimensional or Seamless?
225
CONTRIBUTORS
256
INDEX
258
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Sobre o autor (2000)

Mark J. Rozell is an associate professor of politics at The Catholic University of America.

Clyde Wilcox is a professor of government at Georgetown University. They are the coauthors of Interest Groups in American Campaigns: The New Face of Electioneering (Congressional Quarterly Press, 1999).

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