Chapter 1. Introduction: Presidents, Unified Government and Legislative Control (Jung-Hsiang Tsai)
Chapter 2. A Gently Slopped Leadership: Parliamentary Support for Presidents in France (Damien Lecomte and Olivier Rozenberg)
Chapter 3. Power Scope and Party Disunity of Semi-Presidentialism in Taiwan: The Perspective of Political Participation of Elites and the Masses (Yu-Chung Shen and Jung-Hsiang Tsai)
Chapter 4. President and Congress in the Period of Unified Government in America (Jung-Hsiang Tsai)
Chapter 5. Political Institutions, Democratization, and Incumbent Party Cohesion under Unified Governments in Mexico (Yen-Pin Su and Fabricio A. Fonseca)
Chapter 6. Consensual Decision-Making and No Rebels: Presidentialism in Indonesia (Patrick Ziegenhain)
Chapter 7. Presidents, Unified Government and Legislative Control: What Have We Learned? (Jung-Hsiang Tsai)
Jung-Hsiang Tsai is Professor of Political Science at the National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan. He earned his PhD in Political Science from Boston University, USA. His research interests include comparative semi-presidential studies, comparative presidential studies, Sino-US relationships, and qualitative political methods. His works have been published in Crime, Law, and Social Change, French Politics, and Democratization.
This book aims to explain why some presidents are more successful than others in winning the support of legislators during periods of unified government. This book covers five presidential and semi-presidential systems such as France, Indonesia, Mexico, Taiwan, and the U.S. with a wide variety of institutional arrangements and political dynamics. This book elaborates on explaining how institutional factors such as confidence vote, electoral system, candidate nomination and presidential unilateral power influence the ability of presidents to pass their legislative agendas through comparisons across presidential and semi-presidential systems.
Jung-Hsiang Tsai is Professor of Political Science at National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan