“In the decades that followed the passage of Medicare and Medicaid, countless attempts to reform the troubled US health care system were met with certain demise. The exception to the rule was the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, passed along partisan lines and signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2010. This success, as Meena Bose illustrates in this masterful book, owes much to Obama’s assertive presidential leadership style. Learning from prior presidential failures to navigate the gauntlet of organized interests and congressional veto points, Obama’s decisions at every stage of the policymaking process moved the bill to its dramatic final passage and guided it through an onslaught of post-enactment challenges. A leading expert on presidential policymaking, Bose weaves together penetrating analytical insights into a highly readable narrative. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the challenges of crafting landmark legislative reforms in a polarized age.”—Philip Rocco, coauthor of Obamacare Wars: Federalism, State Politics, and the Affordable Care Act
“The passage of the Affordable Care Act was Barack Obama’s signature domestic policy achievement, succeeding where many presidents of both parties had failed. In this concise, fascinating and highly readable account, Meena Bose, one of the foremost scholars of the American presidency, trains her analytic lens on the complicated dynamics that implicate all of modern politics, including partisan polarization in Congress, presidential leadership, presidential-congressional relations, and the innerworkings and compromises that led to the signing the act, barely a year into Obama’s presidency. Pragmatic Vision will make its way onto course syllabi (it's already required reading for my class on Congress and the presidency), as well as become a standard source for researchers of the Obama presidency generally and health care policy-making specifically.”—Daniel E. Ponder, author of Presidential Leverage: Presidents, Approval, and the American State
“Pragmatic Vision tells the unlikely tale of how the landmark Affordable Care Act endured a journey through a fractious Congress, tempestuous roll out, treacherous court challenges, and relentless efforts by Republicans to repeal it. Meena Bose, a foremost scholar of presidential studies, shows how presidential leadership matters in a polarized age that makes enacting and implementing transformative legislation seemingly quixotic. She serves up a clear-eyed, blow-by-blow account of the stewardship of Barack Obama, who overcame the odds with a rare combination of idealism and perspicacity.”—Sidney M. Milkis, author of Theodore Roosevelt, the Progressive Party, and the Transformation of American Democracy
“Over the past fifteen years the Affordable Care Act has made it over numerous hurdles—in Congress, in the courts, in its executive implementation, in the sphere of public opinion. In this book Meena Bose manages to be both concise and systematic in analyzing the key presidential decisions that set the ACA down that track. In so doing she provides an invaluable guide to how individual leadership matters as it interacts with the institutions of American governance.”—Andrew Rudalevige, coeditor of The Obama Legacy
“The story of the Affordable Care Act has been told from many angles—as an epic about liberal health care reformers finally realizing their goal to expand insurance coverage after a decades-long struggle, as a tale about the unexpected opening of political windows of opportunity, and as a case study of partisan policymaking in an era of hyperpolarization. All these accounts are plausible and compelling, but they downplay or ignore the critical influence of Barack Obama’s presidential leadership in making health care reform happen. In Pragmatic Vision, Meena Bose foregrounds Obama’s decisive role in bringing about the most important expansion of the US welfare state since the Great Society. She demonstrates that Obama’s decisions were largely responsible for elevating health care reform as a domestic priority, for designing a bill that could survive the legislative process, and for providing the flexibility and guidance required for successful policy implementation. The book is accessible, lively, and well-written. An excellent choice for undergraduate courses on leadership, the presidency, and public policy.”—Eric M. Patashnik, author of Countermobilization: Policy Feedback and Backlash in a Polarized Age