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"Determined not to let the press shape the public's view of his presidency, Richard Nixon established the White House Office of Communications soon after his inauguration in 1969. The media's grim portrayals of Vietnam, coupled with Nixon's own personal grievances against the press, led him to charge the new office with the task of controlling the information flow from the executive branch. Although the composition and jurisdiction of this sophisticated public relations agency have fluctuated with each administration, every president since Nixon--Democratic and Republican--has used the Office of Communications to put a favorable "spin" on presidential news. In Spin Control, John Maltese chronicles the development of this powerful White House office and its pivotal role in molding our perception of the modern presidency.
The Office of Communications manages the news, ensuring consistency from the executive branch by determining a "line-of-the-day" to be followed by members of the administration, clearing the appearance of public officials on talk shows, and staging presidential appearances to create "photo opportunities" and "sound-bites." Using up-to-the-minute polling data, the office also targets messages to particular constituencies. For instance, it provides local television stations with satellite interviews of administration officials and distributes op-ed columns, press releases, and camera-ready graphics to specialized media markets. In so doing, the office has become an effective vehicle for building presidential power. Maltese concludes that the history of the Office of Communications illustrates how the public side of the presidency has become increasingly stage-managed.
Presidents can now subtly orchestrate the symbolic spectacle of politics, set the terms of political debate, and more rapidly adjust their policies to changes in public sentiment. Drawing upon thousands of revealing archival documents and candid interviews with a wide range of White House officials including Gerald Ford, Dick Cheney, Larry Speakes, Ron Ziegler, and Charles Colson, Maltese exposes a distinctly modern form of presidential control."--Jacket.
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Previews available in: English
Edition | Availability |
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1
Spin Control: The White House Office of Communications and the Management of Presidential News
2000, University of North Carolina Press
in English
0807863165 9780807863169
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2
Spin control: the White House Office of Communications and the management of presidential news
1994, University of North Carolina Press
in English
- 2nd ed., rev.
0807844527 9780807844526
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3
Spin control: the White House Office of Communications and the management of presidential news
1992, University of North Carolina Press
in English
0807820342 9780807820346
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4
Spin control: the White House Office of Communications and the management of presidential news
Publisher unknown
0807820342 9780807820346
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- Created August 27, 2020
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August 27, 2020 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Better World Books record |