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The President's Cabinet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

John A. Fairlie
Affiliation:
University of Illinois

Extract

The recent publication, within a few months of each other, of two independent works on the President's cabinet serves to call attention to an important political institution in this country, which has hitherto failed to receive adequate recognition. Mr. Bryce has stated that, in the government of the United States, there is “no such thing as a cabinet in the English sense of the term;” and the larger part of his short chapter discusses what the President's cabinet is not rather than what it is. But if the cabinet in the United States is not the same thing as the British cabinet, it is a significant factor in the operation of the government deserving more consideration than it has received.

Mr. Learned disclaims any attempt at a complete history of the cabinet; and, as indicated in the sub-title, presents a series of studies on the origin and formation of the cabinet—its anatomy rather than its functions. But in tracing the development of the composition of the cabinet, approximately half of the text is devoted to chapters on the origin and formation of the executive departments, whose heads have been added to the cabinet as first organized. A second series of studies on cabinet practices and personnel is expected to follow.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 1913

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References

1 Learned, Henry Barrett, The President's Cabinet. Studies in the Origin, Formation and Structure of an American Institution. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1912, xii, 471 pp.Google Scholar

Hinsdale, Mary L., A History of the President's Cabinet. University of Michigan Historical Studies, vol. I, Ann Arbor, Mich., George Wahr, 1911, ix, 355 pp.Google Scholar

2 Anson, , Law and Custom of the Constitution, pt. ii, 2d ed., p. 166.Google Scholar

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