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Conclusion: The Path to American Democratic Leadership
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Published:August 2014
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Abstract
This book has shown that the early Republic was apprehensive over the presidency and that attitudes toward the presidency remained precariously unresolved in 1789. It has examined how Americans sought a clearer understanding of their new national executive before they could accept the power implied by the office, even as the Constitution left too much unexplained about the country's singular central authority. It has discussed the ways that the presidential title controversy created partisan struggles over constitutional interpretations of executive authority. It has analyzed the legislative and public debates that came before Congress finally agreed with the simple title “President of the United States.” The book ends the discussion by reflecting on the legacies of the title controversy, including the emerging paradigm of energetic democratic leadership, the casualty of the presidency's professional relationship to the vice presidency, and the expansion and consolidation of executive power within the limits placed on the president under popular sovereignty.
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