New Books in Political Science

Jack B. Greenberg and John A. Dearborn, "Congressional Expectations of Presidential Self-Restraint" (Cambridge UP, 2025)

Nov 5, 2025
Political scientists Jack B. Greenberg, a scholar from Yale, and John A. Dearborn, from Vanderbilt, dive into the intriguing concept of presidential self-restraint and its implications for Congress. They explore how congressional actions shape executive power, discussing key examples like the FBI director's position. The duo also highlights the impact of polarization on legislative tools and how past presidencies have tested these norms. Their insights reveal why reliance on norms alone may not safeguard democracy, emphasizing the need for a coordinated restoration of balance among branches.
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INSIGHT

Measuring Self-Restraint Through Congress

  • Congress provides an external benchmark to detect presidential self-restraint by embedding expectations into statutes.
  • This shifts measurement from guessing presidential motives to observing whether Congress's expectations are upheld.
ANECDOTE

FBI Tenure Example Shows Intended Forbearance

  • The FBI director's 10-year statutory term assumed presidential forbearance rather than removal protection.
  • Senator Robert Byrd publicly acknowledged that the president could nonetheless remove the director at any time.
INSIGHT

Rising Presidentialism Weakens Checks

  • Congress has increasingly deferred to presidential power, institutionalizing greater presidentialism since Watergate.
  • That deference makes statutory expectations of self-restraint less reliable over time.
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