Experts

Andrew Rudalevige

Fast Facts

  • Past president, American Political Science Association’s Presidents and Executive Politics section
  • Elected fellow, National Academy of Public Administration
  • His books have twice won the Richard E. Neustadt Prize from the American Political Science Association honoring the best book on the presidency
  • Expertise on the presidency, public administration, presidential power, interbranch relations

Areas Of Expertise

  • Governance
  • Founding and Shaping of the Nation
  • Leadership
  • Politics
  • The Presidency

Andrew Rudalevige (Rude-ah-LEV-itch) is the Thomas Brackett Reed Professor of Government at Bowdoin College and an affiliate of the Centre on United States Politics at University College London. A graduate of the University of Chicago and Harvard University, he has also held positions at the London School of Economics and Political Science, Princeton University, the University of East Anglia, Dickinson College, and Sciences-Po Lyon. He is past president of the American Political Science Association’s Presidents and Executive Politics section and an elected fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration.  

Rudalevige has written extensively on questions of presidential power and interbranch relations for both academic and popular audiences. The New Imperial Presidency (University of Michigan Press, 2006) examined the post-Watergate growth of executive authority, not least in the global war on terror, and was described by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., as "a grand sequel for my own The Imperial Presidency." Other books include By Executive Order: Bureaucratic Management and the Limits of Presidential Power (Princeton University Press, 2021), which won the Richard E. Neustadt Prize from the American Political Science Association honoring the best book on the presidency as well as the Louis Brownlow Prize as best book in public administration from the National Academy of Public Administration; Managing the President's Program: Presidential Leadership and Legislative Policy Formulation (Princeton University Press, 2002), which also won the Neustadt Prize; the co-authored textbook The Politics of the Presidency (11th ed., CQ/Sage, 2024); and edited volumes on the Bush, Obama, and Trump presidencies. 

His assessment of ongoing political events and their relation to political science research features regularly on various media outlets, including the Washington Post's Monkey Cage blog and its successor site, Good Authority. In a past life he worked in state and local politics in his home state of Massachusetts. 

Andrew Rudalevige News Feed

“The Comey indictment is notable for its personalized politicization being so open,” said Andrew Rudalevige, a professor of government at Bowdoin College. “The same actions carried out clandestinely would seem scandalous, because they are — and the fact they were so blatantly advertised does not make them less corrupt.”
Andrew Rudalevige Los Angeles Times
UVA’s nonpartisan Miller Center of Public Affairs convenes presidential experts—dozens of leading Democrats and Republicans, scholars from across the country, and top journalists—for the second biennial Conference on the American Presidency, a series of constructive conversations about the modern presidency.
Guian McKee, Rachel Potter, Andrew Rudalevige, William Antholis, Alexander Bick, Everett Eissenstat, Mara Rudman, Sarah Wilson, Sidney Milkis, Louisa Terrell, Ashley Deeks, Eric Edelman, Saikrishna Prakash, Russell Riley, Allan Stam, and Philip Zelikow Miller Center Presents
Issues raised throughout the history of the Office of Management are back with new urgency, warns Andrew Rudalevige
Andrew Rudalevige
Andrew Rudalevige says this particular rescission package was specifically designed to be hyperpalatable for Republicans in Congress, but it risks poisoning the budget process because why would anyone agree to provide the votes to pass a budget on a bipartisan basis if that money can just be clawed back on a partisan basis?
Andrew Rudalevige NPR
"The most lasting impact of this term will be felt in the damage done to the reputation of the United States as a safe harbor where the rule of law is king and where the Constitution is as sacred a national document as any country has developed."
Mara Rudman, Bob Strong, Andrew Rudalevige, and Russell Riley The New York Times
“It’s a shift to see efforts to bring all of the executive branch within the president’s political and personal control,” said Andrew Rudalevige, a Bowdoin College professor and senior fellow at the Miller Center at University of Virginia. “That’s not unprecedented in American history, but it’s very different than the history of the last, say, 50 years since Watergate.”
Andrew Rudalevige Boston Globe