Abstract
The debate on the ‘perils of presidentialism’ has been raging for over 30 years and
gone through at least three waves. It began with the influential work of Juan Linz
and most recently has seen the emergence of a rich literature on coalitional presiden-
tialism, which has demonstrated the capacity of presidents to manage fragmented
multi-party legislatures, and hence overcome the dangers of political deadlock.
Jean Blondel’s last book (African Presidential Republics, Oxford, Routledge, 2019)
belongs to this latest wave in the sense that he argues that presidential systems can
overcome their limitations, and that certain aspects of the presidential models actu-
ally give them an advantage over parliamentary equivalents. This article reviews
Blondel’s argument against the latest developments in African politics. I suggest
that there are fewer instances of positive presidentialism today than Blondel hoped
for, in part because democratic progress has often proved to be particularly vulnera-
ble to later autocratization due to a tendency not to entrench gains via constitutional
reforms. Despite this cautionary note, however, I conclude that Blondel is right to
reject the idea that African cases provide support for the ‘perils of presidentialism’.
This is not only because Blondel highlights a number of presidents who played a
benign or positive role in their country’s political development, but also because the
coalitional presidentialism literature suggests that there is little evidence that parlia-
mentary systems would perform significantly better.
gone through at least three waves. It began with the influential work of Juan Linz
and most recently has seen the emergence of a rich literature on coalitional presiden-
tialism, which has demonstrated the capacity of presidents to manage fragmented
multi-party legislatures, and hence overcome the dangers of political deadlock.
Jean Blondel’s last book (African Presidential Republics, Oxford, Routledge, 2019)
belongs to this latest wave in the sense that he argues that presidential systems can
overcome their limitations, and that certain aspects of the presidential models actu-
ally give them an advantage over parliamentary equivalents. This article reviews
Blondel’s argument against the latest developments in African politics. I suggest
that there are fewer instances of positive presidentialism today than Blondel hoped
for, in part because democratic progress has often proved to be particularly vulnera-
ble to later autocratization due to a tendency not to entrench gains via constitutional
reforms. Despite this cautionary note, however, I conclude that Blondel is right to
reject the idea that African cases provide support for the ‘perils of presidentialism’.
This is not only because Blondel highlights a number of presidents who played a
benign or positive role in their country’s political development, but also because the
coalitional presidentialism literature suggests that there is little evidence that parlia-
mentary systems would perform significantly better.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 14 |
Journal | European Political Science |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 31 Jan 2024 |
Keywords
- Jean Blondel
- Comparative politics
- Coalitional presidentialism
- Legislative and voting behaviour
- African politics