Breaking Through the Noise

Presidential Leadership, Public Opinion, and the News Media

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science, Politics, Leadership, Government
Cover of the book Breaking Through the Noise by Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, Jeffrey S. Peake, Stanford University Press
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Author: Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, Jeffrey S. Peake ISBN: 9780804778213
Publisher: Stanford University Press Publication: August 15, 2011
Imprint: Stanford University Press Language: English
Author: Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, Jeffrey S. Peake
ISBN: 9780804778213
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication: August 15, 2011
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Language: English

Modern presidents engage in public leadership through national television addresses, routine speechmaking, and by speaking to local audiences. With these strategies, presidents tend to influence the media's agenda. In fact, presidential leadership of the news media provides an important avenue for indirect presidential leadership of the public, the president's ultimate target audience. Although frequently left out of sophisticated treatments of the public presidency, the media are directly incorporated into this book's theoretical approach and analysis. The authors find that when the public expresses real concern about an issue, such as high unemployment, the president tends to be responsive. But when the president gives attention to an issue in which the public does not have a preexisting interest, he can expect, through the news media, to directly influence public opinion. Eshbaugh-Soha and Peake offer key insights on when presidents are likely to have their greatest leadership successes and demonstrate that presidents can indeed "break through the noise" of news coverage to lead the public agenda.

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Modern presidents engage in public leadership through national television addresses, routine speechmaking, and by speaking to local audiences. With these strategies, presidents tend to influence the media's agenda. In fact, presidential leadership of the news media provides an important avenue for indirect presidential leadership of the public, the president's ultimate target audience. Although frequently left out of sophisticated treatments of the public presidency, the media are directly incorporated into this book's theoretical approach and analysis. The authors find that when the public expresses real concern about an issue, such as high unemployment, the president tends to be responsive. But when the president gives attention to an issue in which the public does not have a preexisting interest, he can expect, through the news media, to directly influence public opinion. Eshbaugh-Soha and Peake offer key insights on when presidents are likely to have their greatest leadership successes and demonstrate that presidents can indeed "break through the noise" of news coverage to lead the public agenda.

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