Civitas Symposium: Statesmanship and the American Presidency

Who are our American statesmen, and what can we learn from them?

How should we think about statesmanship and presidential power? As Steven Hayward observes in this symposium, we are uncomfortable with even acknowledging that a category of statesmanship should exist. Statesmanship implies discriminating judgment about character, prudence, magnanimity, and justice. The modern liberal mind can't even, as the kids say. Yet we are also stuck with executive leadership, even in a modern constitutional republic. So, who are our American statesmen, and what can we learn from them?

We can draw from different sources to formulate  answers to these questions. How did the Founders of American constitutionalism think about character and executive power? Do the progressives provide better sources of thinking about this issue?  How would institutions influence or condition executive decision-making? What about the size of government today and the exercise of presidential power?

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Character and the American Presidency: A View from the Founding

Gary J. Schmitt
Joseph Bessette
Multiple Contributors
July 22, 2025

Big Government Statesmanship

Yuval Levin
Multiple Contributors
July 22, 2025

Taming the 21st Century Prince

Steven Hayward
Multiple Contributors
July 22, 2025

Andrew Jackson Redefined the American Presidency

John Yoo
Multiple Contributors
July 22, 2025
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