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With one party controlling the presidency and the opposing party controlling Congress, the veto has inevitably become a critical tool of presidential power. Combining sophisticated game theory with unprecedented data, this book analyzes how divided party presidents use threats and vetoes to wrest policy concessions from a hostile Congress. Case studies of the most important vetoes in recent history add texture to the analysis, detailing how President Clinton altered the course of Newt Gingrich's Republican Revolution. Offering the first book-length analysis to bring rational choice theory to bear on the presidency, Veto Bargaining is a major contribution to our understanding of American politics in an age of divided party government.
| List of Tables and Figures | ||
| Preface | ||
| 1 | Divided Government and Interbranch Bargaining | 1 |
| 2 | A Natural History of Veto Bargaining, 1945-1992 | 33 |
| 3 | Rational Choice and the Presidency | 69 |
| 4 | Models of Veto Bargaining | 83 |
| 5 | Explaining the Patterns | 123 |
| 6 | Testing the Models | 152 |
| 7 | Veto Threats | 178 |
| 8 | Interpreting History | 203 |
| 9 | Conclusion | 247 |
| References | 271 | |
| Index | 285 |
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