“Inside the Oval Office: Where Presidents Discipline the Presidency”
Time-management poses a defining challenge of the modern presidency, which is why “scheduling” gets vetted carefully, decided systematically, and implemented fastidiously. While countless profiles and memoirs detail each president’s “behind-the-scenes” work habits, systematic evidence and analysis remain thin. Here, I offer a new look at presidents’ work habits using comprehensive, inter-personally comparable data on all presidents’ public and private activities during a representative sample of days from 1961-2008, Kennedy through Bush 43. Results not only confirm the extraordinary workload all recent presidents have endured, but delving deeper, I find presidents’ work patterns – in terms of their duration and the mix of activities – depend greatly on each individual president. Thus, I find the president-presidency distinction is blurriest in the place it matters most: inside the Oval Office.
*Political Institutions and Political Economy (PIPE) Collaborative is a university-wide research endeavor jointly sponsored by the Price School’s Bedrosian Center and the Office of the Provost. This collaborative will include faculty and graduate students with common interests in various aspects of political institutions and political economy. The program will be designed to encourage research that crosses disciplinary boundaries.