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For Fear of an Elective King: George Washington and the Presidential Title Controversy of 1789-Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon

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In the spring of 1789, within weeks of the establishment of the new federal government based on the U.S. Constitution, the Senate and House of Representatives fell into dispute regarding how to address the president. Congress, the press, and individuals debated more than thirty titles, many of which had royal associations and some of which were clearly monarchical. For Fear of an Elective King is Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon’s rich account of the title controversy and its meanings. The short, intense legislative phase and the prolonged, equally intense public phase animated and shaped the new nation’s broadening political community. Rather than simply reflecting an obsession with etiquette, the question challenged Americans to find an acceptable balance between power and the people’s sovereignty while assuring the country’s place in the Atlantic world. Bartoloni-Tuazon argues that the resolution of the controversy in favor of the modest title of "President" established the importance of recognition of the people's views by the president and evidence of modesty in the presidency, an approach to leadership that fledged the presidency’s power by not flaunting it.How the country titled the president reflected the views of everyday people, as well as the recognition by social and political elites of the irony that authority rested with acquiescence to egalitarian principles. The controversy’s outcome affirmed the republican character of the country’s new president and government, even as the conflict was the opening volley in increasingly partisan struggles over executive power. As such, the dispute is as relevant today as in 1789.

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"For Fear of an Elective King" is a fascinating and well-researched account of the first major conflict of the First Federal Congress in 1789: the question over how to address the President of the United States. The acrimonious legislative battle, which took over three weeks to resolve, pitted the Senate (led by John Adams and Richard Henry Lee) advocating more aggrandizing titles for the Presidency against the House of Representatives that favored a more modest and egalitarian approach to addressing the President.The Senate initially advocated that the Presidential title should be “His Highness the President of the United States of America, and Protector of their Liberties”. John Adams, who forcibly argued that the President needed a “respectable title” to be taken seriously by foreign powers, comes across as characteristically stubborn and seemingly impervious to criticism, thus earning the mock sobriquet “His Rotundity”. Fortunately for posterity, the Senate ultimately acquiesced to the desire of the House to have no official title and since then we now refer to the President simply as Mr. President. (Perhaps Madam President sometime in the future?) Ironically, George Washington was never addressed by the title Mr. President, but instead was addressed as "Sir", "General" or "Excellency"--the latter being his title as commander in chief during the Revolutionary War.Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon has mined an impressive array of primary sources of newspapers in the public debates over the naming controversy and persuasively makes the case that this dispute was far more than just about the title of the President. Instead, the naming dispute was an early installment of the broader--and ongoing--partisan debate on the extent of Presidential power. This book is highly recommended for those interested in the early days of the new republic and the evolution of perceptions of power of the executive branch.
Read this to learn real American history in contrast to the lies of BLM.

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