The dominant paradigm for policymaking by chief executives is that they are first-movers who change the status quo. I re-evaluate this notion by extending recent advances in measuring the conservatism of policy, and by constructing a new comprehensive measure of presidential action. Though executive unilateralism theories predict whether a given status quo will change, empirical studies rely on aggregate analyses of executive productivity and second-order predictions based on assumptions about the spatial distribution of policies. I fail to find support for unilateral action theory in presidential initiatives at the policy-level from 1992 to 2016. Most of the prediction error is due to a high false-negative rate— with the president acting despite supposed constraints enforced by the Congress. Despite widespread acceptance of unilateral action theory, the results imply either that persistent measurement challenges limit opportunities to assess its empirical implications, that the theory itself over-emphasizes the separation of powers as a constraint on action, or both.
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*I thank Charles Cameron, Brandice Canes-Wrone, Fang-yi Chiou, Jesse Crosson, Thomas Gray, Adam Hughes, David Lewis, Nolan McCarty, Anne Joseph O’Connell, Yu Ouyang, Jon Rogowski, Andrew Rudalevige, Sharece Thrower, Justin Vaughn, and audiences at Princeton University and Vanderbilt University for helpful comments and suggestions. A previous version of this paper was presented at the 2019 annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL. Jesse Richman and Project Vote Smart generously provided data for this study. Benjamin Goehring, Justin Fortney, Sebastian Leder Macek, Preet Rajpal, Andres Ramos, and Jacob Walden provided helpful research assistance. I am responsible for all errors.
Lowande K (2021), "Presidents and the Status Quo". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 16 No. 2 pp. 215–244, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00019170
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