Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion, and Search . - 2 Angebote vergleichen

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9780865548459 - Domin: Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion, and Search .
Domin

Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion, and Search .

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ISBN: 9780865548459 bzw. 0865548455, in Englisch, Mercer University Press.

4,54 ($ 5,59)¹ + Versand: 3,24 ($ 3,99)¹ = 7,78 ($ 9,58)¹
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9780865548459,0865548455,jimmy,carter,public,opinion,search, Excellent Marketplace listings for "Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion, and Search ..." by Domin starting as low as $5.59! Marketplace, Shipping to USA only!
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0865548455 - Gregory Paul Domin: Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion
Gregory Paul Domin

Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion (1981)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika EN US

ISBN: 0865548455 bzw. 9780865548459, in Englisch, Mercer University Press, gebraucht.

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20th century,biographical,biographies,biographies and history,biography and history,historical,history,leaders and notable people,modern (16th-21st centuries),presidents and heads of state, Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion, and the Search for Values, 1977-1981, Carter, Public Opinion, and the Search for Values, 1977-1981, reveals that, at times during his term, President Carter was able to effectively manage the four fundamental characteristics of political public opinion: interpretation, mobilization, limitation, and control. When Carter was able to crystallize these facets of public opinion, he experienced his greatest political victories. His brilliant 1976 presidential campaign, as well as his success in ratifying the Panama Canal Treaties, are both examples of Carter's successful use of public opinion. Conversely, when Carter was unable to harness this complex mechanism, he experienced his greatest failures. His political losses with regard to energy legislation and water projects were perhaps his most debilitating. As relations with the public are not mutually exclusive from those of Washington for the executive, this book also analyzes President Carter's stormy relationship with Congress. Carter was not at all comfortable with Washington politics. He abhorred the ingrained system of bargaining and compromise that dominated the Washington political scene, and consequently, distanced himself from it. He also often publicly criticized his peers in Congress, voicing his intolerance for their willingness to compromise the public good for political expedience. Predictably, many of Carter's political pleas died on Capitol Hill, proving that in order to be a political player, you must know how to play the game. Carter knew the game O.
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