Presidents, Politics, and Moderation
Do Moderates Make the Best Presidents?
- In-Person
- 国产视频
740 15th St NW #900
Washington, D.C. 20005 - 1:15PM 鈥 2:45PM EDT
On June 18th the 国产视频 Foundation鈥檚 Next Social Contract Initiative held a book launch for Professor Gil Troy鈥檚 latest book, Leading from the Center: Why Moderates Make the Best Presidents. Professor Troy is a history professor at McGill University and a Visiting Scholar at the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington. Frank Micciche, Deputy Director of the Next Social Contract, moderated the event. An MP3 audio recording can be downloaded below, while video is available at right.
Professor Troy spoke on the difficulties of pushing a moderate agenda in the current media climate. 鈥淧artisanship gets attention,鈥 he said. Bloggers, networks and candidates who take a strong and decisive position get airtime. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to get whipped into a partisan frenzy, much harder to take a breath,鈥 Troy said.
But both prospective presidential nominees have offered at least a rhetoric of centrism. According to Troy, this is more important than people realize. Throughout history effective presidents have voiced a 鈥渓yrical centrism鈥 which inspires people to get behind a candidate鈥檚 vision for the nation, even if they don鈥檛 agree with the candidate on all policy. Troy discussed some of the most effective presidents in our nation鈥檚 history–arguing that they were in fact 鈥渕uscular moderates.鈥
George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan were presidents who took action, but did so by navigating between factions. While many of these figures may seem radical in retrospect, given the climate of their time they were rational men who treaded carefully but steadily in line with their core convictions.
Bill Clinton seemed perfectly cast to be a successful moderate president. However, Troy cites his 鈥渟pineless centrism鈥 and poll-driven agenda as the reason for an unmemorable administration, at least as far as public policy is concerned. And George W. Bush, who had so ably rallied the country after 9/11, was a man of great conviction and little moderation in Troy鈥檚 view. He quotes one of Bush鈥檚 top campaign aides as saying that, in seeking reelection, they would not try to find new voters from among the political middle but would 鈥渞ally the base鈥濃攕uccessfully as it happened.
-Tyler Ibottson-Sindelar, Intern for the Next Social Contract Initiative
Location
Washington, DC, 20009
See map:
Participants
Featured Speaker
- Gil Troy
Professor of History, McGill University
Author, Leading from the Center: Why Moderates Make the Best Presidents
Moderator
- Frank Micciche
Deputy Director, Next Social Contract Initiative
国产视频 Foundation