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Command Of Office : How War, Secrecy, And Deception Transformed The Presidency From Theodore Roosevelt To George W. Bush

  • Command Of Office : How War, Secrecy, And Deception  Transformed The Presidency From Theodore Roosevelt To  George W. Bush
  • Attribution

    Stephen Graubard
  • Publication Details

    Book, Basic Books, 2004
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
     (LOWER LEVEL)  E176.1 .G815 2004  AVAILABLE

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    and the national security issues that dominated much of the foreign policy concerns during the Cold War.In his provocative new account of the enormous shift of power to the office of the American presidency, Graubard draws upon his intimate knowledge of every president since FDR to reveal the dangerous transformation of the executive branch in the last hundred years. Graubard sees three different “presidencies” over the course of the century, marked by increasing accumulation of authority: the presidency created by TR, Wilson, and FDR, continued under Truman and Eisenhower, in which foreign policy issues played a far greater role in presidential politics; (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
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  • Notes

    • "Command of office reveals the remarkable - and dangerous - concentration of power in the American presidency over the course of the twentieth century, told through incisive analyses of the eighteen men who have held the office and the events that shaped their presidencies. Stephen Graubard argues that the modern presidency began after McKinley’s assassination with the succession of Theodore Roosevelt - a new kind of president for the new century. His vigorous presidency foretold the expansion of wartime authority under Woodrow Wilson; the growth of federal government under Franklin D. Roosevelt; and the national security issues that dominated American foreign policy during the Cold War." "Drawing upon his intimate knowledge of every president since FDR, Graubard reveals the dangerous transformation of the executive branch in the last hundred years. He tracks the steady expansion of secrecy as a tool of presidential authority, one that inevitably diminished the power of the other two branches of government."–BOOK JACKET
  • Contents

    • 1. Of a republic transformed by kings, courtiers, and warriors
    • 2. Accidental presidents and vice presidential heirs apparent
    • 3. Let the people speak : no more smoke- filled rooms
    • 4. To be a king
    • 5. The dauphin
    • 6. The democratic interloper
    • 7. Back to normalcy
    • 8. The great enigma
    • 9. The engineer
    • 10. The savior
    • 11. The creator
    • 12. The general
    • 13. The boy wonder
    • 14. The Texan
    • 15. The villain?
    • 16. The innocent
    • 17. The New Georgia
    • 18. The actor
    • 19. The Connecticut Yankee in disguise
    • 20. The rake’s progress
    • 21. Reagan’s boy
    • App. Bryce’s and Tocqueville’s America : a prefiguring of twentieth-century America?
  • ISBN

    • 0465027571
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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