Diane J. Heith, Associate Professor of Government and Politics, to Speak about Impeachment at Clinton Presidency Conference

November 12, 2005

“Saving a President: Public Opinion and Impeachment” is the topic Associate Professor of Government and Politics Diane J. Heith will address as part of a panel on Saturday, November 12 at 3:45 p.m., at Hofstra University’s Conference on the Clinton Presidency. Professor Heith will speak about the influence public opinion had on the Senate’s refusal to remove President Clinton from office. “Members of the Senate felt they couldn’t remove him because of his high public approval rating,” she says.

Professor Heith should know. Her article, “Polling for a Defense: The White House Public Opinion Apparatus and the Clinton Impeachment” about President Clinton’s skillful use of public opinion polls to develop his impeachment defense strategy, must have caught the eye of Hofstra University’s Presidential Conference committee members, she believes, as she was invited to speak at the upcoming conference on the Clinton Presidency. Former President Clinton as well as 140 scholars, journalists and former government officials from the Clinton Administration will address the three-day conference. (Professor Heith’s article was published in the Presidential Studies Quarterly 30, no. 4, in 2000.)

“Presidential Advisor Dick Morris polled the public the day before the Monica Lewinsky scandal broke,” says Professor Heith. “He learned that the public would accept that the President lied to his wife about a personal matter, but not if he lied about anything else. President Clinton successfully used what he knew about public opinion in formulating his response when the scandal broke, and during the investigation which led to his impeachment.” In researching this topic, Professor Heith studied the text of nightly newscasts on the three major TV broadcast networks during the scandal. “There were 249 stories during 1998 that mentioned public opinion,” she says.

Professor Heith has been a Professor of Government and Politics at St. John’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences since 1998. A specialist in American institutions, she is the author of a book, Polling to Govern: Public Opinion and Presidential Leadership, Stanford University Press, 2004, and the co-editor with Lori Cox Han of a book on President George W. Bush and public opinion entitled, In the Public Domain: Presidents and the Challenge of Public Leadership, State University of New York Press, SUNY Series on the Presidency: Contemporary Issues, 2005.

Recently, she presented a paper, “Reaching Women: Soft Media in the 2004 Presidential Election Cycle,” at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association in Washington, D.C. She is a board member of the Association’s Presidency Section, the Books and Articles section editor of its PRG Newsletter, and a reviewer for six professional journals.

At St. John’s, Professor Heith has been the recipient of numerous faculty recognition awards, and serves on several university committees. She has also been a mentor in the Intel Science Program since 2001.