1998
DOI: 10.2307/2586309
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From Abe Fortas to Zoë Baird: Why Some Presidential Nominations Fail in the Senate

Abstract: W"Jf 7"hy, given a strong presumption of success, do some presidential nominations fail? Of 1,464 \/%/ important nominations from 1965 to 1994, less than 5% failed. Ninety-four percent of failures f f were rejected or withdrawn before reaching the floor, suggesting that opponents are most effective during prefloor stages. We propose a theoretical framework based on the notion that policy entrepreneurs pursue their goals within the context of a presumption of success. Logit analysis tends to support the theory … Show more

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Cited by 94 publications
(117 citation statements)
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“…Second, this chapter joins other studies that demonstrate the impor tance of studying lawmaking in Congress in stages before the floor (e.g., Hall and Wayman 1990;Krutz, Fleisher, and Bond 1998;Taylor 1998). Omnibus legislating in effect inserts an important decision about policy outcomes (what will be incorporated into a must-pass bill) into the prefloor legislative process.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Second, this chapter joins other studies that demonstrate the impor tance of studying lawmaking in Congress in stages before the floor (e.g., Hall and Wayman 1990;Krutz, Fleisher, and Bond 1998;Taylor 1998). Omnibus legislating in effect inserts an important decision about policy outcomes (what will be incorporated into a must-pass bill) into the prefloor legislative process.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…This alternate route gets the president around having his bills go it alone in the legislative process and perhaps get blocked. The president, like members of Congress, faces a presumption of failure for bills introduced in Congress (Krutz, Fleisher, and Bond 1998). While the president is more likely to succeed in the legislative process than a typical member of Congress, only one-fourth of presidential proposals are enacted into law in a form still recognizable to the president (Peterson 1990).…”
Section: Congress and The Presidentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Presidents wish to appoint commissioners who reflect their own ideology. But for the few nominations that do fail, extreme ideology has been cited as a primary reason (Cameron, Cover, & Segal, 1990;Krutz, Fleisher, & Bond, 1998). This occurs even though the White House generally will not name a nominee unless he or she has passed the scrutiny of relevant industries or interests (Kohlmeier, 1969).…”
Section: Ntsb and Appointment Vacanciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While most legislative decisions hinge on political factors, a nomination's fate also turns on the personal characteristics of the nominee. Or, more specifically, on how opponents of the nomination can characterize the nominee (King and Riddlesperger 1996;Krutz, Fleisher, and Bond 1998;Mackenzie 1981). After a review of the literature on Senate consideration of presidential nominations, we define and test a model of cabinet confirmation voting that includes both political and personal factors believed to affect senators' decisions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%