Richard Neustadt


 
 

Richard Elliott Neustadt (June 26, 1919 - October 31, 2003) was an American political historian specializing in the U.S. Presidency. He also served as advisor to several Presidents.

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Born in Philadelphia, Neustadt received an A.B. from UC Berkeley (1939), followed by an M.A. degree from Harvard in 1941. After a short stint as an economist in the Office of Price Administration, he joined the U.S. Navy in 1942, where he was a supply officer in the Aleutian Islands, and stayed until 1946. He then went into the Bureau of Budget (now known as the Office of Management and Budget) while working on his Harvard Ph.D., which he received in 1951.

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He was the Special Assistant of the White House Office from 1950-53 under President Harry S. Truman. During the following year, he was a professor of public administration at Cornell, then from 1954-64, taught government at Columbia, where he received a Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award (1961).

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It was at Columbia that Neustadt wrote Presidential Power (1960; a revised edition entitled Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents: The Politics of Leadership appeared in 1990), in which he examined the decision-making process at the highest levels of government. He argued that the President is actually rather weak in the U.S. government, being unable to effect significant change without the approval of the Congress, and that in practice the President must rely on a combination of personal persuasion, professional reputation "inside the Beltway", and public prestige to get things done.

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With his book appearing as it did just before the election of John F. Kennedy, Neustadt soon found himself in demand by the President-elect, and began his advisory role with a 20-page memo suggesting things the President should and should not try to do at the beginning of his term. During the 1960s Neustadt continued to advise both Kennedy and then Lyndon B. Johnson.

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Neustadt later founded the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, where he taught for more than two decades, retiring in 1989.

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His first wife, Bertha Cummings "Bert" Neustadt, died in 1984; in 1987 he married British politician Shirley Williams.

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After his retirement he served as an advisor to Bill Clinton.

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One of Neustadt's closest students was a young Al Gore. Gore's interest in politics was reignited by a junior seminar taught by Neustadt in 1968 on the presidency. In the course, Gore role-played John F. Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Gore arranged to have private tutorials with Neustadt during his senior year, meeting with him two hours weekly.

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Neustadt died in London, England, after complications from a fall.

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June 26: June 26 is the 177th day of the year (178th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 188 days remaining....

1919: 1919 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar)....

October 31: October 31 is the 304th day of the year (305th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 61 days remaining, as the final day of October....


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~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
Books
External links
 


 

~ Related Subjects ~

Leap year (2) - John F. Kennedy (2) - October 31 (2) - June 26 (2) - Gregorian Calendar (2) - Columbia (1) - Presidential Power (1) - Cornell (1) - Harry S. Truman (1) - Professor (1) - Public administration (1) - Inside the Beltway (1) - Cuban Missile Crisis (1) - London (1) - England (1) -
 

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