Inventing the Job of President: Leadership Style from George Washington to Andrew Jackson by Fred I. Greenstein

Inventing the Job of President: Leadership Style from George Washington to Andrew Jackson

Fred I. Greenstein
176 pages
Princeton University Press
Aug 2009
Hardcover
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From George Washington's decision to buy time for the new nation by signing the less-than-ideal Jay Treaty with Great Britain in 1795 to George W. Bush's order of a military intervention in Iraq in 2003, the matter of who is president of the United States is of the utmost importance. In this book, Fred Greenstein examines the leadership styles of the earliest presidents, men who served at a time when it was by no means certain that the American experiment in free government would succeed. In his groundbreaking book The Presidential Difference, Greenstein evaluated the personal strengths and weaknesses of the modern presidents since Franklin D. Roosevelt. Here, he takes us back to the very founding of the republic to apply the same yardsticks to the first seven presidents from Washington to Andrew Jackson, giving his no-nonsense assessment of the qualities that did and did not serve them well in office.
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About this book
Pages 176
Publisher Princeton University...
Published 2009
Readers 0