Barber states that a president’s “character, worldview, and style fit together in a a dynamic package understandable in psychological terms”. Style is the most visible part of a president’s pattern or tendencies. Style is how a president goes about doing his three, main political roles: rhetoric, personal relations, and cogitated thought. For example, speaking, dealing face-to-face with politicians, reading, writing and calculating by himself in order to manage details in the office are all political roles that, from president to president, varies greatly in the amount of priority each president puts into one role over the other. The emphasis on one political role over another sets apart each president in their …show more content…
Before he was president, he had an impressive list of accomplishments. Harrison’s previous occupations are that of power and authority. He established himself as a local attorney, a Presbyterian church leader and politician in Indiana, to name a few. He also served as a colonel during the American Civil War. Afterwards, he unsuccessfully ran for governor in Indiana but was later elected to the U.S. Senate by the Indiana legislature. During his childhood, he grew up in a Whig household, consequently he grew up with substantial beliefs to that specific party. He gradually changed his views and joined the Republican party after its formation in