Robert Saldin
Director, Mansfield Ethics and Public Affairs Program
Contact
- Office
- Liberal Arts 354
- robert.saldin@umontana.edu
- Website
- Curriculum Vitae
Personal Summary
I am the Director of 's Ethics and Public Affairs Program and a Professor of at the 猎奇重口. I'm also a Senior Fellow at the in Washington, DC. My most recent book is (Oxford University Press, 2020), co-authored with Steven Teles. My previous books are (Oxford University Press, 2017) and (Cambridge University Press, 2011). My scholarly articles have appeared in academic journals such as The Journal of Politics, Political Science Quarterly, Journal of Policy History, Political Research Quarterly, and Presidential Studies Quarterly. I've also written extensively for the popular press, including The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Republic, National Affairs, Washington Monthly, and The American Interest. Previously, I was a Robert Wood Johnson Scholar at , the , a Fellow at the , and a Visiting Scholar at the .
Recent articles and essays include National Affairs, Winter 2022; Niskanen Center, with Kal Munis, March 2020; and National Affairs, with Steven Teles, Fall 2020.
Never Trump has been well-received across the political spectrum, including in , , and , among others.
Education
Ph.D., University of Virginia, 2008
B.A., Davidson College, 2000
Selected Publications
“Never Trump Republicans and the 2022 Elections,” The Forum 21:1 (2023).
Niskanen Center, with Robert Eisinger, Oct. 2022.
Washington Monthly, with B. Kal Munis, July 28, 2022.
Washington Post, with Marc C. Johnson, May 4, 2022.
Democracy: A Journal of Ideas, with B. Kal Munis, Spring 2022.
National Affairs, Winter 2022.
Niskanen Center, with B. Kal Munis and Richard Burke, October 2021.
Niskanen Center, August 2021.
Niskanen Center, with B. Kal Munis, March 2021.
(Oxford University Press, 2020), with Steven Teles.
National Affairs, with Steven Teles, Fall 2020.
The New Republic, with Steven Teles, Aug. 7, 2020.
, with co-author Steven Teles and contributors Megan McArdle, Johnathan Rauch, George Thomas, and David Karol, Aug. 3, 2020.
The Atlantic, with Steven Teles, May 2020.
New York Times, with Steven Teles, March 20, 2020.
"," Niskanen Center, with Steven Teles, Dec. 2019.
(Oxford University Press, 2017).
"[An] important new book...There are at least two distinctly profitable ways of reading (and teaching) Saldin’s book. First, the book’s focus on the minutiae of the legislative process—the role of committees, budgetary forecasting, the reconciliation process, and parliamentary rulings, for example—make the book useful for teaching congressional procedure in a way that standard approaches rarely capture...Second, Saldin’s book is essential reading for those seeking to understand the historical and procedural contexts within which health care policy, in
particular, is made...When policymakers return to the question of long-term care—and they will, because they must, especially in an aging United States—Saldin’s book should be one of their first stops." - , 2018
"Rob Saldin has written the kind of book that I wish I had authored, the kind that is an instant 'classic'....Saldin's most important contribution is to provide a broad understanding of American politics, from the inner-workings of committees in Congress, to Congressional members' relationships with each other and advocates, to the machinations of the executive branch...It does what many books and articles cannot -- explain not only how advocacy groups or Congressional committees or executive agencies work, but how they work in relation to one another, and why." - , 2018
"Saldin's policy tracing is first-rate and is a core strength of [the book]...Saldin's attentive and thorough contribution improves our understanding of how budget politics are ubiquitous and likely to produce counterintuitive and counterproductive public policy." - , June 2018
"Lovely...strongly institutionalist, focusing on the impact of institutions and legislative design...[An] interesting and important contribution to answering the question of why American public policy is so very complex, with implications for scholarly research as well as for political action." - , June 2018
"Excellent." - , April 2018
"Solid scholarship and clear, jargon-free writing. Summing Up: Highly recommended." - , July 2017
"As it made its way through Congress in 2009 and 2010, the Affordable Care Act basically took shape through a long series of back-and-forth adjustments between the relevant committees and the Congressional Budget Office, intended to tweak the coverage and cost scores of the bill to accord with the idiosyncrasies of CBO’s modeling. Some forms of this gaming were cynical and reckless — the foremost example must be the CLASS ACT, a long-term-care program known from the start to be completely unsustainable, which was included in the bill purely to manipulate its cost score and then abandoned before it actually took effect. But almost every facet of the legislative design of Obamacare was a product of this kind of back and forth, so that the law in some respects was built to achieve a certain result in CBO’s model even more than in the world outside it. (On this subject, I’d highly recommend political scientist Robert Saldin’s recent book When Bad Policy Makes Good Politics: Running the Numbers on Health Reform.)" -
"In When Bad Policy Makes Good Politics, 猎奇重口 political scientist Robert P. Saldin makes the case that CLASS was a crucial part of why Obamacare made it through Congress despite the fact that just about everyone knew it was completely unworkable....Obamacare’s champions were hardly alone in working the CBO process to make expensive policies look cheap. Saldin cites the Bush tax cuts as a sterling example of how this particular game is played....There are lessons in all of this for policymakers whether they’re on the left or the right.... The fault here lies not with the CBO, which does the best it can with its narrowly circumscribed role. It’s with all of us, on the left and right, who fixate on making the numbers look good and pay little heed to how a policy is actually going to work." -
"A remarkable book that illuminates how government really works. Saldin guides us through the Congressional wonderland: Shrewd legislators organize a much needed reform that 'scores' well in the all important budget analysis and, as a result, enables the entire Obamacare proposal--even though everyone knows it cannot possibly work. Along the way we learn about Congress, health care, policy, liberals, conservatives, Washington, DC, and America itself. Fascinating, elegant, important and highly recommended." - James A. Morone, Brown
"Come for the story of long-term care reform, stay for the critique of CBO scoring! Saldin makes a provocative argument about the incentives for politically viable if economically unviable policymaking encouraged by the budget process reforms of the 1970s. Not all will agree, but all will learn a lot from this absorbing account of the CLASS Act and the contemporary policy process." - Andrea Louise Campbell, MIT
"Every student of health policy or disability should read When Bad Policy Makes Good Politics, the best account of the CLASS Act's implosion, a tragic, oddly overlooked, episode in the history of health reform." - Harold Pollack, University of Chicago
"," Washington Monthly, Aug. 3, 2017.
“,” Political Science Quartery, with Patrick S. Roberts, 131:4 (Winter 2016 - 2017).
"," The American Interest, with Patrick S. Roberts, Jan. 31, 2017.
"," The Washington Post, Dec. 16, 2016.
(Cambridge University Press, 2011; paperback, 2013).
"Saldin's work is a smart and fresh look at a key topic. It is rich with interesting information. It places wars at the center of American political development. From Manila Bay through Vietnam, the wars have fed into politics and policymaking in lasting ways. The implications for understanding our current era are clear and important." - David Mayhew, Yale
"War, the American State, and Politics since 1898 is an essential corrective to the notion that all politics is domestic. Paying close attention to the institutional state, to democratic rights, and to partisan politicking, Rob Saldin instead finds the tendrils of foreign combat absolutely everywhere." - Byron Shafer, University of Wisconsin
"It has long since become an accepted truism that 'war made the state,' as Charles Tilly famously remarked. Scholars of comparative politics are not surprised by this assertion, and have devoted much attention to understanding this important relationship. Yet the study of American politics is just beginning to grapple with its implications, both for state building and political development more broadly. A good place to start is this ambitious, well-written book by Robert Saldin, a successful effort that helps us better understand the impact that wars had on the American political system in the twentieth century....[His] linkage of international events to domestic developments is quite illuminating for those interested in [American political development], as well as those who study foreign policy....Saldin has written an important book that should be read widely." - William D. Adler, Perspectives on Politics
"Saldin sheds new light on transformations in American state building during war....Students of international and domestic politics will find this book valuable in showing how international variables affect domestic outcomes." - Sean Kay, Political Science Quarterly
"War and democracy have been linked since the Peloponnesian War, and the modern state's ability to make war has been inextricably linked to its ability to incorporate large numbers of citizens as taxpayers and especially as soldiers. Robert Saldin's new book offers an important account of these dynamics in the context of American political development, and it is an account that surely warrants serious attention from students of American democracy. And of democratization more generally." - Jeffrey C. Isaac, Indiana University
“Foreign Policy on the Homefront: War and the Development of the American Welfare State,” in , Herbert Obinger, Klaus Petersen, and Peter Starke, eds., Oxford University Press.
“,” The Hill, with Patrick S. Roberts, July 16, 2015.
“Not Such a CLASS Act: America’s Long-Term Care Problem,” The Forum (Spring 2015).
"," National Affairs (Fall 2014).
“What War’s Good For: Minority Rights Expansions in American Political Development” in , Raymond La Raja, editor (Routledge, 2013).
“Strange Bedfellows: War and Minority Rights,” World Affairs (March/April 2011).
“,” Presidential Studies Quarterly 41:1 (2011).
"" The Forum 8:4 (2010).
"," Journal of Policy History 22:4 (2010).
"'" Journal of Politics 72:3 (2010).
"," The Forum 6:4 (2008).
“American State Building in the Post-9/11 and Iraq Era,” PS: Political Science and Politics 41:1 (2008).
Professional Experience
Niskanen Center. Senior Fellow. 2021 - present.
Harvard University. Fellow. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholars Program. 2010 – 2012.
Johns Hopkins University. Patrick Henry Postdoctoral Fellowship. Departments of Political Science and History. 2007 – 2008.
Miller Center of Public Affairs. Fellow. Governing America in a Global Era Program. 2006 – 2007.
University of California, Berkeley. Visiting Scholar. Institute of Governmental Studies. 2005 – 2007.