Barber, James David.1993. The Presidential Character. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
2.
Bond, Jon, and Richard Fleisher.1980. "The Limits of Presidential Popularity as a Source of Influence in the U.S. House." Legislative Studies Quarterly5: 69-78.
3.
_. 1990. The President in the Legislative Arena. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
4.
Bond, Jon, Richard Fleisher, and Glen Krutz.1996. "An Overview of the Empirical Findings on Presidential-Congressional Relations." In James Thurber, ed., Rivals for Power: Presidential-Congressional Relations. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press.
5.
Borrelli, Stephen, and Grace Simmons.1992. "Congressional Responsiveness to Presidential Popularity: The Electoral Context." Political Behavior15: 93-112.
6.
Brace, Paul, and Barbara Hinckley1992. Follow the Leader. New York : Basic Books.
7.
Bunce, Valerie.1980. Do New Leaders Make a Difference?Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
8.
Collier, Kenneth, and Terry Sullivan. 1995. "New Evidence Undercutting the Linkage of Approval with Presidential Support and Influence." Journal of Politics57: 197-209.
9.
Covington, Cary R.1987. "Staying Private: Gaining Congressional Support for Unpublicized Presidential Preferences on Roll Call Votes." Journal of Politics49: 737-45.
10.
Covington, Cary R., J. Mark Wrighton, and Rhonda Kinney1995. "A Presidency-Augmented Model of Presidential Success on House Roll Call Votes." American Journal of Political Science39: 1001-24.
11.
Cronin, Thomas.1975. The State of the Presidency. Boston : Little, Brown.
12.
Davis, Eric.1979. "Legislative Reform and the Decline of Presidential Influence on Capitol Hill." British Journal of Political Science9: 465-80.
13.
Edwards, George.1976. "Presidential Influence in the House: Presidential Prestige as a Source of Presidential Power." American Political Science Review70: 101-13.
14.
_. 1985. "Measuring Presidential Success in Congress: Alternative Approaches." Journal of Politics47: 667-85.
15.
_. 1989. At the Margins. New Haven: Yale University Press.
16.
George, Tracey, and Lee Epstein.1992. "On the Nature of Supreme Court Decisionmaking." American Political Science Review86: 323-37.
17.
Hager, Gregory, and Terry Sullivan.1994. "President-Centered and Presidency-Centered Explanations of Presidential Public Activity." American Journal of Political Science38: 1079-1103.
18.
Jones, Charles.1994. The Presidency in a Separated System. Washington, DC: Brookings.
19.
Kellerman, Barbara.1984. The Political PresidencyNew York: Oxford University Press.
20.
Kernell, Samuel.1978. "Explaining Presidential Popularity" American Political Science Review72: 506-22.
21.
_. 1986. Going Public: New Strategies of Presidential Leaders. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly
22.
Light, Paul.1983. The President's Agenda. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
23.
_. 1989. "The Focusing Skill and Presidential Influence in Congress ." In Christopher Deering, ed., Congressional Politics. Chicago: Dorsey.
24.
McPherson, Harry.1972. A Political Education. Boston : Little, Brown.
25.
Neustadt, Richard E.1960. Presidential PowerNew York : Wiley.
26.
Oleszek, Walter.1995. Congressional Procedures and the Policy Process . Washington, DC: Congressioinal Quarterly Press.
27.
_. 1996. "The New Era of Congressional Policy Making." In James Thurber, ed., Rivals for Power. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press.
28.
Oppenheimer, Bruce.1993. "Declining Presidential Success with Congress." In Richard Waterman, ed., The Presidency Reconsidered. Itasca, IL: Peacock .
29.
Peterson, Mark. 1990. Legislating Together: The White House and Capitol Hill from Eisenhower to Reagan. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
30.
Pfiffner, James.1987. The Strategic Presidency: Hitting the Ground Running . Chicago: Dorsey.
31.
Rivers, Douglas, and Nancy Rose.1985. "Passing the President's Program: Public Opinion and Presidential Influence in Congress." American Journal of Political Science29: 183-96.
32.
Rose, Richard.1991. The Postmodern President: The White House Meets the World , 2nd ed. Chatham, NJ: Chatham House.
33.
Shull, Steven, ed. 1991. The Two Presidencies: A Quarter Century Assessment. Chicago : Nelson-Hall.
34.
Skorownek, Steven.1993. The Politics Presidents Make. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
35.
Sinclair, Barbara.1985. "Agenda Control and Policy Success: Ronald Reagan and the 97th Congress." Legislative Studies Quarterly10: 291-314.
36.
Sullivan, Terry.1991. "The Bank Account Presidency: A New Measure and Evidence on the Temporal Path of Presidential Influence." American Journal of Political Science35: 686-723.
37.
West, Darrell.1987. Congress and Economic Policymaking. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press.
38.
Wildavsky, Aaron.1966. "The Two Presidencies." Reprinted in Steven Shull, ed., The Two Presidencies: A Quarter Century Assessment. Chicago: Nelson-Hall.
39.
Zeidenstein, Harvey1991. "The Two Presidencies Thesis is Alive and Well and Has Been Living in the U.S. Senate since 1973." In Steven Shull, ed., The Two Presidencies: A Quarter Century Assessment, pp. 75-100. Chicago: Nelson-Hall .