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

Nov 5, 2025
Jack B. Greenberg, a Yale political scientist, and John A. Dearborn from Vanderbilt delve into the complexities of presidential self-restraint in their new book. They explore how Congress has crafted executive positions to encourage presidents to moderate their use of power. The discussion highlights pivotal shifts in the relationship between the legislative and executive branches, including case studies on appointments like the FBI Director. They also examine how recent presidential actions challenge these congressional expectations, raising questions about institutional power versus norms.
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INSIGHT

Congress Relies On Presidential Forbearance

  • Congressional expectations of presidential self-restraint mean laws assume presidents will not fully deploy granted powers.
  • Congress often designs offices (terms, qualifications) assuming presidential forbearance rather than enforceable limits.
ADVICE

Prefer Concise, Structured Publication

  • Use concise, bounded formats to present complex institutional arguments effectively.
  • Cambridge Elements' 30,000-word cap forces precise cases and focused evidence.
INSIGHT

Three Forces Increasing Reliance On Norms

  • Three developmental shifts shape Congress's design choices: presidentialism, polarization, and constitutional formalism.
  • These shifts make Congress more reliant on norms while courts constrain legislative tools.
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