1st Edition

Lobbying the New President Interests in Transition

By Heath Brown Copyright 2012
    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    218 Pages
    by Routledge

    Presidential transitions offer the chance for new ideas, policies, and people to inhabit the White House. Transitions have triggered policy change for decades and eager interest groups have sought ways to capitalize on this often chaotic phase of US politics. President-Elect Barack Obama declared that lobbyists would be forbidden from serving his transition and issued stiff regulations and rules to limit their access to the planning for his White House. Yet even though Obama’s efforts mirror previous Presidents anti-lobbyist efforts, all Presidential transitions provide certain channels of influence, and Obama himself chose the head of a powerful and politically oriented think tank, the Center for American Progress, to run his transition. New Presidents need the information, ideas, and political capital that groups possess. Thus a curious paradox.

    Using an innovative mixed methodology integrating a historical analysis of original documents, original interviews with over 40 interest group leaders and transition leaders, a survey of 300 interest groups and content analysis of 300 interest group letters, Lobbying the New President uncovers the politics of interest group influence during Presidential transitions. In doing so, Heath Brown asks:

    • Was the role played by Heritage in 1980 and CAP in 2008 indicative of a pattern of influence during the transition phase?
    • Or have Presidents effectively shielded themselves from outside influence at the earliest point of their time in office?
    • What can we learn about the larger study of interest groups and the Presidency from a focus on the transition phase?

    This book is a valuable resource that goes beyond the field of presidency studies which American politics scholars as well as public policy specialists should not go without.

    1. The Call for the Book 2. Defining Interest Groups, Exploring Policy Theory 3. Institutional Transition Pluralism 4. Interest Group Strategy: Cataloguing Transition Tactics 5. The Obama Transition: Modeling Activity with Survey Research on Interest Group Strategy 6. Linking Strategy to Outcomes 7. Advising the New President: Content Analysis of Issue Framing and Advice 8. Assesment, Evaluation, and Future Research

    Biography

    Heath Brown is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Affairs at Seton Hall University.

    "This book is well written, thoroughly researched, and interesting. It manages both to fill a significant scholarly gap and to connect disparate literatures. It will appeal primarily to scholars of interest groups and lobbying, but it will also be of interest to scholars of the presidency and American politics more generally." - Graham G. Dodds, Concordia University

    "Brown provides a useful contribution that sheds light on a neglected area of study and does much to augment the limited data available for analysis." - Emily J. Charnock, University of Virginia