The polls: cabinet member and presidential approval.
Panagopoulos, Costas
The choosing of ministers is a matter of no little importance for a
prince; and their worth depends on the sagacity of the prince himself.
--Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince (quoted in Keohane 2005)
To what extent are performance evaluations of the president and of
key subordinates related? Despite vast literatures that comment both on
the growth of the administrative presidency and on the determinants and
dynamics of presidential approval, empirical studies of the relationship
between presidential approval and approval of other key executive branch
officials are surprisingly scarce. Recent studies (Panagopoulos 2006)
seek to fill this void, and this article aims to proceed in a similar
vein.
Links between presidential and cabinet-level approval can have
important behavioral consequences. We may expect, for example, that
presidents, as rational actors, may act to maximize their own popularity
by replacing unpopular cabinet members. Conversely, presidents lacking
in approval may seek to boost their own popularity by tapping popular
subordinates for key administrative posts. These arguments are
reasonable if a clear and direct relationship between cabinet member
performance ratings and presidential approval exists.
Machiavelli suggests in The Prince that such a connection may
exist: "The first opinion that is formed of a ruler's
intelligence is based on the quality of the men he has around him"
(quoted in Keohane 2003). In a recent essay on leadership traits,
Nannerl Keohane similarly argues that "subordinates who are both
competent and loyal reflect well on the leader because observers assume
that the leader knows how to judge their competence and acts so as to
deserve their loyalty" (Keohane 2005). Yet there is no scholarly
consensus about such a direct link. In his seminal work on the
presidency, Presidential Power, Neustadt (1980) suggests presidents
determine their reputations alone. "The professional reputation of
a President in Washington is made or altered by the man himself,"
Neustadt argues. "No one can guard it for him; no one saves him
from himself" (1980, 60). Neustadt goes on to argue: "In a
government where Secretaries of the Treasury may go astray at press
conferences, where Secretaries of Defense may choose the poorest time to
make announcements, where Presidents may not be briefed on legislative
drafts--and ours is such a Government no matter who is President--the
fact that his own conduct will decide what others think of him is
precious for the man inside the White House" (1980, 61).
Is the president, in fact, so insulated politically from the
actions of his subordinates? Recent studies suggest this is empirically
plausible. In a study that examined the relationship between President
George W. Bush's approval ratings and those of Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld (Panagopoulos 2006), I found no relationship between the
two. My 2006 study suggests presidents and senior-level advisors derive
levels of job approval independently. Although I observed similarities
in overall patterns of opinions, causal relationships between
presidential approval and assessments of Rumsfeld's job performance
were not detected (Panagopoulos 2006).
Lacking evidence of such a direct link, it is not clear that
presidents stand to benefit much from dismissing cabinet secretaries,
even if they are unpopular. An alternative possibility is that
presidents will not mind unpopular subordinates, as their lack of
popularity may deflect criticism away from the president and onto the
subordinate, distancing the president from direct fallout. In both of
these scenarios, however, unpopular subordinates are not, at a minimum,
adversely affecting public evaluations of presidential performance.
Under such circumstances subordinates are expected to survive, whereas a
president may have incentives to dismiss unpopular administration
officials whose poor approval ratings hurt the president's
directly. A growing literature reflects on conditions under which
principals (prime ministers, presidents) may sack agents (cabinet
members) (Palmer 1995), and this study aims to present an examination of
the U.S. case by examining presidential approval and approval ratings
for the president's secretary of state during the presidency of
George W. Bush.
As chief diplomat for presidential administrations, secretaries of
state are central, high-profile members of the cabinet. The events
following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, including the
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq that ensued, have heightened the profile of
the secretary of state and sensitized Americans to issues of diplomatic
significance, arguably catapulting Secretary Colin Powell and,
subsequently, Secretary Condoleezza Rice, into the national spotlight.
After all, it fell upon Secretary Powell to make the case for the
invasion of Iraq to members of the Security Council at the United
Nations in February 2003, a presentation that received widespread
national media coverage. This attention has enabled Americans to monitor
and assess their performance as secretary of state. This article
investigates the public's evaluations of the secretary of
state's job performance over time. It seeks to explain the patterns
in opinion that are observed. More generally, this study assesses the
degree to which the public's evaluations of key cabinet members,
such as the secretary of state, impact the public evaluations of the
president and vice versa.
Public Opinion and Secretaries of State
The American public's attitudes about secretaries of state are
routinely assessed by polling organizations. This article examines the
dynamics of public opinion toward secretaries of state in the Bush
administrations between October 2001 and December 2005 (no data are
available for the Bush administration prior to October 2001). (1)
Quarterly data on secretary of state job approval ratings are displayed
in Figure 1. The data presented reveal variation in job approval between
2001 and 2005 and also show that the public's evaluation of the
performance of secretaries of state declined steadily during this
period. Job approval ratings, which exceeded 90 percent in the immediate
aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, have hovered around 72
percent in the four most recent quarters included in the analysis.
Approval ratings have ranged from a minimum of 70 percent to a maximum
of 95 percent over this time period, and the average quarterly job
approval rating has been 83.1 percent. Regressing approval ratings on
time and a constant, the data indicate job approval for Bush's
secretaries of state has declined by almost 6 percentage points every
year between 2001 and 2005 (ordinary least squares [OLS] regression
coefficient = -1.44; standard error = .13; p < .01; R-squared = .88;
N = 17). The empirical evidence confirms the American public's
confidence in the ability of secretaries of state to handle the duties
of the office has deteriorated significantly in recent years.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
During this time period, President Bush was served by two
secretaries of state, General Colin Powell and former National Security
Adviser Condoleezza Rice. An examination of the data presented in Figure
1 reveals Secretary Powell's job approval ratings were higher on
average than Secretary Rice's; the mean level of approval for
Powell was 86.6 percent (N = 13), compared to 71.8 percent (N = 4) for
Rice. Both Powell's and Rice's approval ratings show signs of
deterioration over the duration of their respective tenures as State
Department leaders.
Presidential and Secretary of State Approval
Given the public's weakening assessments of presidential
performance over this period, many analysts suggested the
president's popular secretaries of state were an asset for the
administration. This was especially true during the tenure of Secretary
Powell, who was perceived as pragmatic, effective, and moderate and who
consistently emerged as the most popular political figure in the nation
in opinion surveys early during President Bush's administration
(Burns 2002). To what extent does public sentiment about top
diplomats' job performance impact assessments of presidential job
performance? To determine whether public evaluations of the president
and his State Department secretary are interdependent or independent, I
have assembled quarterly approval measures for President Bush for the
same period spanning 2001 to 2003. (2) Presidential approval was
determined using data collected by the Gallup organization.
In addition to quarterly job approval ratings for secretary of
state, Figure 1 displays job approval ratings for President Bush for the
corresponding quarterly periods between 2001 and 2005. The data show
that the public's approval of secretary of state job performance
has consistently exceeded the president's job approval for most of
this period.
Figure 1 also suggests a close association between the approval
measures for the two political actors over this period. An analysis of
the data reveals a high instantaneous (bivariate) correlation between
the two series (Pearson's R correlation coefficient = 0.86; p <
.01). This initial evidence suggests a strong interdependent
relationship between secretary of state job approval and President
Bush's performance evaluations.
Correlation does not necessarily signify causation, however, and
the relationship we observe may not be causal. Moreover, causality, if
it exists, can flow in either direction. In other words, President
Bush's job approval rating may influence assessments of the
secretary of state or vice versa. To investigate these possibilities and
to determine causality, I use Granger (1969) causality tests. Granger
causality tests whether lagged information on a variable Y provides any
statistically significant information about a variable X in the presence
of lagged X. If not, then Y does not Granger-cause X. I estimate
regressions with one lag to determine whether secretary of state
approval Granger-causes Bush approval and vice versa. Given that
approval is measured quarterly, I did not extend the analysis beyond one
lag.
Table 1 presents the results of the causality tests. The findings
indicate no causal relationship between secretary of state approval and
presidential approval. In both equations, only the lagged dependent
variable influences the dependent variable and is statistically
significant at conventional levels. The inclusion of lagged secretary of
state approval does not help to predict Bush approval, for instance, and
lagged Bush approval is similarly unrelated to secretary of state
approval ratings. In other words, secretary of state job approval
appears to be independently derived from President Bush's approval,
and President Bush's approval is not affected directly by secretary
of state approval ratings. The results of this analysis suggest each of
these two political actors derive their job approval measures
independently.
Explaining Secretary of State Approval
The task remains to explain the variation we observe in approval
ratings for secretaries of state over this period. What forces influence
the public's assessment of secretary of state job performance?
Following Burden and Mughan (1999) and Panagopoulos (2006), I establish
three general categories of explanatory variables: general political
attitudes, economic variables, and patterns of media coverage. Details
on operationalization appear in the Appendix.
Scholars have demonstrated that media coverage influences
presidential approval (Burden and Mughan 1999; Ragsdale 1997). I expect
that the impact of media coverage, both quantity and tone, extends to
the secretary of state. I consider two measures of media coverage:
newspaper stories and network television stories. My measure of the
amount of newspaper coverage is the quarterly count of stories that
explicitly mention the secretary of state that appeared in three
national newspapers over the period of this study. (3) To measure the
amount of media coverage of the secretary of state on network
television, I measure the total number of stories that explicitly
mention the secretary of state that appeared on the three networks (ABC,
CBS, or NBC) or on CNN.
Figure 2 displays the quarterly counts of each of the two
categories of media coverage. The data presented in Figure 2 show that
the number of newspaper stories that explicitly mention the secretary of
state ranged from a low of 88 to a high of 677 during the period of the
study. An analysis of the data shows that newspaper coverage of the
chief diplomat increased consistently over this period, by an average of
22 stories per quarter. The total number of stories on network
television that mention the secretary of state ranged from a quarterly
low of 269 to a high of 1,686, but no discernible trend in the amount of
network television coverage can be detected. One clearly notices the
spike in the total number of stories about Powell that follows his
presentation to the United Nations Security Council during the first
quarter of 2003.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
The second set of explanatory variables is economic. I consider two
measures of macroeconomic performance: quarterly change in unemployment
and inflation. Economic performance has been shown to influence
presidential evaluations, and it is conceivable that economic
indicators, viewed through the prism of war and diplomacy, may be
conflated with evaluations about diplomatic performance and spill over to affect approval ratings for the secretary of state.
The main attitudinal variable in the analysis is macropartisanship.
MacKuen, Erikson, and Stimson (1989) have demonstrated that partisan
identification can be dynamic and can affect--and be affected
by--changes in the political surroundings. Following Burden and Mughan
(1999, 243) it is measured as the proportion of partisan (Republican)
identifiers, and it is included to take account of long-standing
partisan predispositions in the electorate that may influence secretary
of state approval.
Variables to capture the effect of each of these factors in
explaining performance evaluations of the secretary of state are
included in a multivariate model I estimate below. In addition, I
include two additional dummy variables which I expect to be relevant as
controls in the empirical analysis. One variable captures the effect of
the Iraq conflict, coded 1 if the Iraqi invasion was ongoing during the
quarter in the analysis and 0 otherwise. I include a second dummy
variable coded 1 if the secretary of state was Condoleezza Rice and 0
for quarters during the tenure of Secretary Powell.
Table 2 presents the descriptive statistics on the range of
variables included in the analysis that follows.
To estimate the linear model while correcting for serial
correlation, I use the Prais-Winsten regression technique. The results
of the estimation are presented in Table 3. The findings indicate that
the secretary of state's job performance evaluations are not
influenced by the economic or attitudinal variables, sets of indicators
routinely shown to affect presidential approval. Only media coverage
influences the public's assessment of the secretary of state's
job performance. Interestingly, the results suggest newspaper coverage
and network television coverage exert opposite effects: newspaper
coverage bolsters approval while network television coverage depresses
approval. Additional research would be required to discern whether the
nature of coverage across media is qualitatively different, but such an
exercise is beyond the scope of this study. I speculate, however, that
the difference in media effects I observe may be partly driven by the
characteristics of coverage in the two media. Scholars have claimed that
television coverage focuses heavily and increasingly on controversy and
conflict and, to a lesser extent, on substance. Newspaper coverage, by
contrast, may focus more on substantive matters and less on
contentiousness. If these characterizations are accurate, this may help
us to understand why television coverage may damage perceptions of
Secretary of State performance while newspaper coverage strengthens
these assessments. The results also show that overall levels of approval
are comparatively lower during Rice's tenure at the helm of the
State Department (compared to Powell) and that approval is lower during
the period of the Iraqi invasion.
Conclusions
The results of this analysis suggest that secretary of state job
approval ratings are independent of President Bush's performance
evaluations and vice versa. Secretary of state job approval is driven by
media coverage and not by the forces of macropartisanship and national
economic performance.
On a more general note, the results of these analyses suggest that
Americans are quite sophisticated with respect to ascribing
accountability for government performance to specific political actors.
Americans appear to hold the secretary of state responsible for matters
within his or her purview or domain, but not necessarily beyond that.
The condition of the economy, for example, does not appear to affect
Americans' assessments of the performance of the secretary of
state. Additional research may reveal similar patterns for other members
of a president's cabinet, lending additional support for the notion
that Americans attribute responsibility for specific failures or
accomplishments within specific policy domains to the appropriate
executive branch official.
Appendix
Secretary of state approval. Job approval ratings for secretary of
state were collected from nationally representative opinion surveys
conducted between October 1, 2001 and December 31, 2005. Survey
organizations included: Gallup/CNN/USA Today, Fox News/Opinion Dynamics,
Los Angeles Times, NBC/Wall Street Journal, Quinnipiac University Poll,
Time/SRBI, and Time/CNN/Harris. Details are available upon request. In
most surveys, the wording for the job approval question was
consistently: "Do you approve or disapprove of the way [Colin
Powell/Condoleezza Rice] is handling [his/her] job as Secretary of
State?" Responses other than "approve" and
"disapprove" were excluded before computing overall
percentages. The measure of "relative approval" is akin to
Stimson's (1976) indicator. Data are aggregated quarterly.
Bush approval. Job approval data for President Bush are computed in
the same manner as approval for secretary of state (aggregated
quarterly) as indicators of "relative approval" in order to be
comparable. Data are compiled from surveys conducted by the Gallup
organization. Question wording is: "Do you approve or disapprove of
the way President Bush is handling his job as President?"
Economic variables: Unemployment/inflation. Data for these
variables were obtained from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Measures
represent quarterly change in overall levels of unemployment and
inflation during the period of the study.
Macropartisanship. Proportion of all party identifiers in CBS
News/New York Times polls or Gallup surveys who are Republican: %
Republican/(% Republican + % Democrat). Independents were excluded.
Media coverage (newspaper). The total number of stories (aggregated
quarterly) that mention Secretary Powell (2001-2004) or Secretary Rice
(2005) that appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, or
Washington Post. These data were acquired from Lexis/ Nexis.
Media coverage (television). The total number of stories
(aggregated quarterly) that mention Secretary Powell (2001-2004) or
Secretary Rice (2005) that appeared on network news transmissions on
ABC, CBS, NBC, or CNN. These data were acquired from news transcripts
available from Lexis/Nexis.
Iraq War. Dummy variable indicating the U.S. invasion of Iraq was
ongoing (coded 1, 0 otherwise).
Condoleezza Rice. Dummy variable indicating the secretary of state
was Rice (coded 1, 0 otherwise).
References
Burden, Barry C., and Anthony Mughan. 1999. Public opinion and
Hillary Clinton. Public Opinion Quarterly 63: 237-50.
Burns, Jim. 2002. Powell's popularity tops even Bush, poll
finds. September 30. Available from http://www.CNSNews.com. Accessed
March 20, 2006.
Granger, C. W. J. 1969. Investigating causal relations by
econometric methods and cross-spectral methods. Econometrica 34: 424-38.
Keohane, Nannerl. 2005. On leadership. Perspectives on Politics 3:
705-22.
MacKuen, Michael, Robert S. Erikson, and James A. Stimson. 1989.
Macropartisanship. American Political Science Review 83:1125-42.
Neustadt, Richard. 1980. Presidential power, 2d ed. New York:
Wiley.
Palmer, Matthew. 1995. Toward an economics of comparative political
organization: Examining ministerial responsibility. Journal of Law,
Economics, & Organization 11: 164-88.
Panagopoulos, Costas. 2006. Public opinion and Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld. Presidential Studies Quarterly 36:117-26.
Ragsdale, Lyn. 1997. Disconnected politics: Public opinion and
presidents. In Understanding public opinion, edited by Barbara Norrander
and Clyde Wilcox. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press.
Stimson, James A. 1976. Public support for American presidents: A
cyclical model. Public Opinion Quarterly 40: 1-21.
(1.) No single time series is available for this analysis. I have
pooled twenty-four nationally representative surveys that asked
respondents whether or not they approve of Colin
Powell's/Condoleezza Rice's handling of his/her job as
secretary of state. Full descriptions of the samples, dates, and survey
organizations appear in the Appendix. Data presented in Figure 1
represent quarterly aggregations of "relative approval" (see
Stimson 1976 and Burden and Mughan 1999 for a discussion of this
operationalization). Approval is measured as percent approve/(percent
approve + percent disapprove). In three cases, job approval data were
unavailable (1st quarter 2004, 3d quarter 2004, and 3d quarter 2005). In
cases where Powell's or Rice's approval data were missing for
a particular quarter (at time t), the value was imputed with the mean of
the observations at t - 1 and t + 1 (see Burden and Mughan 1999). When
the approval question is asked multiple times within a single quarter,
the observations are averaged to create quarterly observations.
(2.) Presidential job approval data are determined exactly as
Powell's and Rice's job approval ratings are, thereby making
these two measures comparable over the complete time period. There were
no missing data for presidential approval.
(3.) The newspapers are the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and
Washington Post.
COSTAS PANAGOPOULOS
Fordham University
Costas Panagopoulos is a visiting assistant professor of political
science and director of the Elections and Campaign Management Program at
Fordham University.
TABLE 1
Granger Causality Tests
Secretary
of State Presidential
Approval Approval
Secretary of state [approval.sub.t-1] .52 * (.28) .31 (.23)
Presidential [approval.sub.t-1] .22 .74 *** (.12)
Constant 25.19 (16.02) -12.56 (13.23)
Number of cases 16 16
Adjusted R-squared .74 .94
OLS regression. Standard errors are in parentheses.
* p < .10; ** p < .05; *** p <.01.
TABLE 2
Variables and Descriptive Statistics
Variable Mean SD Min. Max.
Secretary of state approval 83.12 7.74 70 95
Bush approval 61.53 14.03 42 90
Unemployment (change) 0.01 0.24 -0.2 0.7
Inflation (change) 0.06 0.58 -0.8 1.1
Macropartisanship 47.35 1.87 44 52
Newspaper stories 231 184 88 677
Network television stories 620 331 269 1,686
Iraq War 0.59 0.51 0 1
Secretary of State Rice 0.24 0.44 0 1
Variable Range
Secretary of state approval [0,100]
Bush approval [0,100]
Unemployment (change) (-[infinity], +[infinity])
Inflation (change) (-[infinity], +[infinity])
Macropartisanship [0,100]
Newspaper stories [0, +[infinity])
Network television stories [0, +[infinity])
Iraq War [0, 1]
Secretary of State Rice [0, 1]
N = 17 for all variables. See Appendix for operationalizations.
TABLE 3
Determinants of Opinion Toward Secretary of State
(Prais-Winsten Regression)
Dependent Variable: Secretary
of State Approval
Independent Variables Coefficient
Newspaper coverage .021 * (.012)
Television coverage -.007 ** (.003)
Iraq War -7.337 *** (1.827)
Condoleezza Rice -19.390 *** (5.179)
Unemployment (change) 3.911 (3.989)
Inflation (change) -.906 (1.291)
Macropartisanship -.185 (.308)
Constant 100.421 *** (13.760)
[rho] -.48
Number of cases 17
Adjusted R-squared .976
Durbin-Watson 2.32
(transformed)
Standard errors are in parentheses.
* p < .10; ** p < .05; *** p < .01.