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MARGARET ROBERTSON
FERGUSON
Indiana University at Indianapolis
Chief Executive Success in the Legislative Arena
American chief executives
are popularly believed to play a crucial leadership role in the legislative
process, but this role is not well understood by scholars. This article
develops a model of executive leadership success in the legislative arena
based on personal, institutional, political, and economic factors and
tests that model with data on the legislative priorities of the 50 state
governors in 1993-94. Institutional features of the executive, which have
been the focus of much scholarship, are found to have little effect on
a governor's legislative success. On the other hand, the nature of the
legislature is quite important here, with more professional legislatures
actually encouraging executive leadership. A governor's personal characteristics,
political party, and a state's economy also influence a governor's legislative
success. These findings point to the importance of examining chief executives
in the context in which they work if we are to understand their role as
legislative leader.
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