Title: Today
1Todays Agenda
- President
- Why delegate to the president?
- Costs of delegation
- Who cares about the bureaucracy?
- What is the bureaucracy and what functions does
it perform? - How powerful are bureaucrats?
- How do we hold them accountable
- Terry Moe private vs. public firms
2Exam Preparation 2
- What do Congressional committees and
subcommittees represent, according to lecture? - Congress attempt at efficiency
- Division of labor, like in a restaurant
- Congress attempt to overcome the framers
constraints of majority power - All of the above
- None of these, dummy
3The Roots of the Office of President of the
United States
- American colonists distrusted the King so much so
that the Articles of Confederation largely and
deliberately neglected the need for an executive. - With the failure of the Articles, the Framers
accepted the need for an executive officer that
would be strong enough to govern, but not so
strong that he could abuse power.
4The Philadelphia Convention
- Qualifications for Office
- The Constitution requires that the President must
be - A natural born citizen
- 35 years old
- 14 years a U.S. resident
- Why This Weird Number?
5The Constitutional Powers of the President
- Unlike Article I, Article II is quite short and
details few powers for the President. - The president received certain enumerated powers
in the Constitution. - The first line of Article II may be the most
important grant of power to the president. It
states "the executive power shall be vested in a
President of the United States of America."
6Campaigns and the President
- Ideological campaigning is sometimes overrated.
- Non-ideological campaigning.
- But primaries! Ugh!
7How to Balance Power?
- How do you keep a President strong and weak at
the same time? - Commander in Chief
- Fighting a war by committee is useless
- More power in times of crisis
8How to Balance Power?
- How do you keep a President strong and weak at
the same time? - Commander in Chief
- Fighting a war by committee is useless
- More power in times of crisis
- BUT...thats a lot of POWER for 1 person
- Only Congress declares War?
- Controls the purse strings
- Can pass laws limiting the ability to engage in
conflict
9Legislative Power
Chief-of-State
Pardoning Power
Treaty-making Power
Chief Executive
Chief Diplomat
Veto Power
Commander -in-Chief
Appointment Power
10Congress and the President
- Especially since the 1930s, the President has
seemed to be more powerful than Congress. - Presidents often are responsible for leadership
in setting the policy agenda for Congress.
11Reasons for changes
- Information advantages
- You dont know what I know
- Expertise advantages
- I am an expert, and you are useless
- War or conflict
- Economic downturns
- Party Leader (Im a Winner!)
- Treaties (ex Louisiana Purchase)
12The Evolution of Presidential Power
Cold War Ends
World War II
World War I
The Civil War
Cold War
T.Roosevelt Trust busing, Natl parks, imperialism
FDR The Great Depression and New Deal
Progressive reform era/ W. Wilson
13A democratic Institution?
- YES
- Only national office elected by all of the people
directly (more about this later) - Most of the time, the Presidents actions are
consistent with public opinion - Less beholden to special interests than
individual members of Congress.
14A democratic Institution?
- NO
- Can lead (and hence manipulate) public opinion
- Secrecy in national security matters is often a
cause of concern - Assumes extraordinary power in crisis situations
15How to make someone look bad
- Get them to veto poor kids health care (even if
the veto might be reasonable)
http//rackjite.com/archives/709-Jon-Stewart-Does-
Bush-Veto-of-S-SHIP.html
16Reasons for changes
- Information advantages
- You dont know what I know
- Expertise advantages
- I am an expert, and you are dumb
- War or conflict
- Economic downturns
- Party Leader (Im a Winner!)
- Treaties (ex Louisiana Purchase)
17Why Delegate to the President?
- Think about the difference between the slow and
broken legislative process versus the rapidity
of one office - Quick decisions are necessary at times
- To get passage of sticky legislation
- Employment Discrimination (EEOC)
- To pass the Buck
- Environmental Regulation
18What are the Costs of Delegation?
- Too much discretion too much power?
- Monitoring costs
- Adverse selection
- Uncertainty of future presidents
- Hard to renege
- Veto power of president
- Same party support in Congress
19A democratic Institution?
- YES
- Only national office elected by all of the people
directly (more about this later) - Most of the time, the Presidents actions are
consistent with public opinion - Less beholden to special interests than
individual members of Congress.
20A democratic Institution?
- NO
- Can lead (and thus manipulate) public opinion
- Secrecy in national security matters is often a
cause of concern - Assumes extraordinary power in crisis situations
21Federal Executive Departments
- Department of Agriculture (USDA)
- Department of Commerce (DOC)
- Department of Defense (DOD)
- Department of Education (ED)
- Department of Energy (DOE)
- Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
- Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
- Dept. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
- Department of Justice (DOJ)
- Department of Labor (DOL)
- Department of State (DOS)
- Department of the Interior (DOI)
- Department of the Treasury
- Department of Transportation (DOT)
- Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
22Can the Bureaucracy be Controlled?
- Dilemma (isnt there always?)
- Bureaucrats make government more efficient
- They are given discretion to make decisions in
the interest of the public - They are under control of elected officials
23Can the Bureaucracy be Controlled?
- Dilemma (isnt there always?)
- Bureaucrats make government more efficient
- They are given discretion to make decisions in
the interest of the public - They are under control of elected officials
- BUT!!!!!!!
- How do we hold them accountable?
- Can the bureaucracy represent?
- Is this democratic?
24Who is in Charge of the Federal Bureaucracy?
- Congress
- President
- Courts
- Interests Groups
- The Public (clients)
- All of these and none of these?
25Is the bureaucracy accountable, and if so to
whom?
- Congress has the authority to
- pass legislation that alters an agency's
functions - abolish existing programs
- investigate bureaucratic activities
- influence presidential appointments
- establish the budget
- write legislation to limit bureaucratic discretion
26Is the bureaucracy accountable, and if so to
whom?
- The President has the authority to
- appoint and remove agency heads
- reorganize the bureaucracy
- make changes in budget proposals
- ignore initiatives from the bureaucracy
- issue executive orders
- reduce an agency's budget
27Is the bureaucracy accountable, and if so to
whom?
- The Judiciary has the power to
- rule on whether the bureaucracy has acted within
the law - rule on constitutionality
- force respect for the rights of individuals in
bureaucratic and administrative hearings
28Accountability to Citizens
- Increased opportunities to petition
- Publicly funded interveners/ombudspersons
- Monitoring programs
- Advisory committees (w/public members)
- Sunshine provisions (announced open meetings)
- Freedom of information laws
29The Power of the Agent
- Informing their masters
- Using information strategically
- Speaking out against their masters
- Going public
- Implementing policy as they see fit
- Using their discretion to adjust policy
- Negotiating with their masters
- Going on Strike
30The Power of the Agent
31The Power of the Agent
- Informing their masters
- Using information strategically
- Speaking out against their masters
- Going public
- Implementing policy as they see fit
- Using their discretion to adjust policy
- Negotiating with their masters
- Going on Strike
- Selecting their masters (Whaaaaa?!)
32The Power of the Agent
33What to do with the Public Library?
- We all pay for it with our tax money
- But we disagree about
- What books to carry?
- How many staff?
- Hours?
- Programs for kids?
34Some Problems with Markets
- Monopolies or diseconomies of scale
- Imperfect information
- Negative externalities
- Public (collective) goods not provided
35Terry Moe Public firms versus Private firms
- 4 Important differences
- Public authority
- Temporary property rights in a democracy
36Terry Moe Public firms versus Private firms
- 4 Important differences
- Public authority
- Temporary property rights in a democracy
- Political firms
- Everyone is involved in setting the rules
37Terry Moe Public firms versus Private firms
- 4 Important differences
- Public authority
- Temporary property rights in a democracy
- Political firms
- Everyone is involved in setting the rules
- Political uncertainty
- The future is uncertain (act like it!)
38Terry Moe Public firms versus Private firms
- 4 Important differences
- Public authority
- Temporary property rights in a democracy
- Political firms
- Everyone is involved in setting the rules
- Political uncertainty
- The future is uncertain (act like it!)
- Political compromise
- Policy created in part by people who want it to
fail
39Public Firm
Private Firm
Temporary Owners
Owner
Workers
Bureaucrats
40Public Firm
Private Firm
Fixed Legal Env.
Temporary Owners
Owner
Workers
Bureaucrats
41Public Firm
Private Firm
Changing Legal Env.
Fixed Legal Env.
Temporary Owners
Owner
Workers
Bureaucrats
42Terry Moe Public firms versus Private firms
- 4 Important differences
- Public authority
- Temporary property rights in a democracy
- Political firms
- Everyone is involved in setting the rules
43Public Firm
Private Firm
Changing Legal Env.
Fixed Legal Env.
Owner
Congress
Pres.
Courts
Workers
Bureaucrats
44Terry Moe Public firms versus Private firms
- 4 Important differences
- Public authority
- Temporary property rights in a democracy
- Political firms
- Everyone is involved in setting the rules
- Political uncertainty
- The future is uncertain (act like it!)
45Public Firm
Private Firm
Changing Legal Env.
Fixed Legal Env.
Owner
Congress
Pres.
Courts
Workers
Bureaucrats
46Terry Moe Public firms versus Private firms
- 4 Important differences
- Public authority
- Temporary property rights in a democracy
- Political firms
- Everyone is involved in setting the rules
- Political uncertainty
- The future is uncertain (act like it!)
- Political compromise
- Policy created in part by people who want it to
fail
47Public Firm
Private Firm
Changing Legal Env.
Fixed Legal Env.
Owner
Congress
Pres.
Courts
Workers
Bureaucrats
48Public Firm
Private Firm
Changing Legal Env.
Fixed Legal Env.
Owner
Congress
Pres.
Courts
Workers
Bureaucrats
49Exam Preparation 3
- Can a Presidential veto be used as a weapon
against the President? - No, the veto is only the Presidents weapon
- Yes, if the President is forced to override
popular legislation - Yes, sometimes voters can formally veto the
President - Yes, the Supreme Court can formally veto a
Presidents veto
50Clint Eastwood