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1 March 2012 The impact of presidential illness on the administration of Dwight D. Eisenhower
Robert E. Gilbert
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Abstract

In March 2008, I published an article in this journal that examined the ways in which the White House managed the news—and minimized the political impact—of Dwight D. Eisenhower's massive 1955 heart attack. In addition, the analysis explored the manner in which Eisenhower himself, in handling this issue, had brilliantly “manipulated his medical team, safeguarded his image, cajoled his staff, confused the press, managed his advisers, dominated his party, and ran a campaign that was virtually impossible for the opposition to counteract” (p. 18).1 This article expands on my previous work by considering the ways in which Eisenhower's ill health had significant public policy repercussions that went beyond the immediate political effects evaluated in 2008. These included the drawbacks associated with Eisenhower's concept of “Team Government,” a tragic war in the Middle East, a serious deterioration of the U.S. relationship with three very close allies and, finally, the beginnings of a presidentially led effort to add a much needed “presidential disability” amendment to the United States Constitution. These latter effects have been studied here through use of primary source materials located at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library, commentaries written by Eisenhower himself, members of his family and other close associates and the voluminous secondary literature that has appeared over the years focusing on the Eisenhower presidency.

Association for Politics and the Life Sciences
Robert E. Gilbert "The impact of presidential illness on the administration of Dwight D. Eisenhower," Politics and the Life Sciences 31(1), 16-35, (1 March 2012). https://doi.org/10.2990/31_1-2_16
Published: 1 March 2012
JOURNAL ARTICLE
20 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
embolic stroke
heart attack
ileitis surgery
Middle East war
President Eisenhower
team government
Twenty-Fifth Amendment
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