Will President Trump do as Woodrow Wilson Said?
Chapter 12 focuses on the presidency and discusses how the American presidency has grown and changed since our nation’s beginning. One specific aspect of change is in the relationship between the president and the general public. This evolution has made the presidency a more powerful and debatably more democratic office.
Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, made appeals to the public a pivotal part of his presidency. He advocated for a new theory of presidency that emphasized the importance of close connections between the president and the public. Woodrow Wilson argued that presidents are unique because “only they are chosen by the entire nation.” Furthermore, he said that presidents should help inform the citizens about government, interpret their desires, and respond to it. His new theory of presidency has been followed more and more fully in the 20th and 21st century.
While there is not doubt that President Donald Trump is a controversial president, it cannot be argued that President Trump has interpreted the desires of the American citizens regarding the Parkland, FL. Shooting and has begun to respond to them. On February 14, 2018 there was a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. In the aftermath of one of the world’s deadliest school massacres, some of the survivors started the #NeverAgain movement, which pushes for gun-law reform. These survivors’ efforts have captured the public’s attention and encouraged similar efforts across the country.
In the past, mass shootings have played out in similar ways on the public stage. First, the nation is overcome with sorrow and grief followed by a period of outrage. There then comes a push back from gun-rights forces, the political discussion shifts from guns to mental health (or other factors), the public attention drifts, and there is a lack of action by lawmakers, congressmen, and the president. This time, however, President Trump has responded in a different way.
Trump has hosted a group of bipartisan lawmakers at the White House in order to discuss gun reform. There are 6 measures that lawmakers are now debating, however I will only mention a few here. First, Trump suggested arming teachers. On Twitter, Trump promoted this measure of having “trained and gun adept” teachers and coaches in schools who could confront a shooter before first responders arrived. Secondly, Trump is open to the idea of strengthening federal background checks on those that purchase guns. These strengthened background checks would eliminate the “loopholes” that currently exist allowing people to purchase guns even when they legally should not be able to do so. A third proposed and Trump supported measure is to ban bump stocks, an attachment that allows a semi-automatic rifle to resemble a fully automatic weapon.
The question now is this; will President Trump make the changes the people want to see? Will President Trump turn the above measures into legitimate changes in the existing policies? Or will President Trump undermine democracy and stop responding here, just as lawmakers and congressmen have done so many times in the past?
Sources:
Textbook
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/02/parkland-students-power/554399/
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/03/15/gun-control-measures-proposed-by-trump-lawmakers-after-florida-school-shooting.html