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Title: Executive Offices of the President and Bureaucracy


1
Executive Offices of the President and
Bureaucracy
2
Executive Offices of the President
  • The Executive Office consists of agencies that
    report directly to the president and perform
    staff services for him, led by the Chief of Staff
  • Some agencies are large bureaucracies.
  • The president appoints the top positions, but
    unlike the White House Staff members, these
    Executive Office appointees must be confirmed by
    the Senate.
  • Modern EOP created under the Reorganization Act
    of 1939 - with the goal of
  • To reduce expenditures
  • To increase efficiency
  • To consolidate agencies according to major
    purposes
  • To reduce the number of agencies by consolidating
    those having similar functions and by abolishing
    such as may not be necessary
  • To eliminate overlapping and duplication of
    effort.

3
EOP
  • The National Security Council advises the
    president on American military affairs and
    foreign policy. The NSC consists of the
    president, the vice president, and the
    secretaries of state and defense. The
    presidents national security adviser runs the
    staff of the NSC and also advises the president.
  • The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is the
    largest office in the EOP, and it has the job of
    preparing the national budget that the president
    proposes to Congress every year. The OMB also
    monitors the spending of funds approved by
    Congress and checks the budgets and records of
    executive agencies.
  • The National Economic Council helps the president
    with economic planning. The council consists of
    three leading economists and is assisted by about
    60 other economists, attorneys, and political
    scientists. The NEC is the presidents major
    source of advice and information about the
    nations economy.

4
EOP Websites
  • http//www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/nsc
  • http//www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
  • http//www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/nec

5
The Cabinet
  • Cabinet Officers are heads of the 15 major
    departments
  • Cabinet officers serve as advisors, but depending
    the administration plays a limited role in
    deliberation.
  • Appointed by the President and confirmed by
    Congress
  • 14 Cabinet positions - with the order of creation
    used for certain protocol.
  • Inner Cabinet - Secretary of State, Secretary of
    the Treasury, Attorney General and Secretary of
    Defense

6
  • The Cabinet includes
  • the Vice President
  • Heads of 15 executive departments
  • Health and Human Services
  • Homeland Security
  • Housing and Urban Development
  • Interior
  • Labor
  • State
  • Transportation
  • Treasury
  • Veterans Affairs
  • Attorney General
  • Agriculture
  • Commerce
  • Defense
  • Education
  • Energy

7
Bureaucracy
  • a large, complex organization of appointed, not
    elected, officials.
  • Bureaucracies exist in many countries in many
    areas of life, including corporations,
    universities, and local and state governments.
  • The term actually comes from the French word
    bureau, a reference to the small desks that the
    kings representatives set up in towns as they
    traveled across the country doing the kings
    business.

8
Bureaucracy according to Max Weber
  • hierarchical authority structure - A chain of
    command that is hierarchical the top bureaucrat
    has ultimate control, and authority flows from
    the top down.
  • task specialization - A clear division of labor
    in which every individual has a specialized job
  • extensive rules - Clearly written,
    well-established formal rules that all people in
    the organization follow
  • clear goals - A clearly defined set of goals that
    all people in the organization strive toward
  • the merit principle - Merit-based hiring and
    promotion no granting of jobs to friends or
    family unless they are the best qualified
  • impersonality - Job performance that is judged by
    productivity, or how much work the individual
    gets done

9
American Federal Bureaucracy
  • Divided supervision
  • Close public scrutiny
  • Regulation rather than public ownership

10
Growth of Bureaucracy
  • Article II, section 3 of the Constitution allows
    the president to appoint officers not mentioned
    in the Constitution
  • 1789-1829 bureaucrats were made up of wealthy,
    white, landowning males
  • Patronage
  • Pendleton Act - Civil Service Commision

11
Modern Bureaucracy
  • The Office of Personnel Management
  • administers civil service laws, rules, and
    regulations.
  • administers written examinations for the
    competitive service, which includes about
    two-thirds of all appointed officials and is in
    charge of hiring for most agencies.
  • The Merit Systems Protection Board
  • protects the integrity of the federal merit
    system and the rights of federal employees
  • hears charges of wrongdoing and employee appeals
    against agency actions and orders disciplinary
    actions against agency executives or employees.

12
Bureaucracy Data
  • About 57 are male, 43 are female.
  • About 73 are white, 27 are minority (includes
    blacks, Asians, native Americans, and Hispanics).
  • About 33 are hired by the Defense Department,
    26 by the Postal Service, and 41 in other
    agencies.
  • Only about 10 work in the Washington area, 90
    work in other parts of the United States.
  • The average age is about 42.
  • The number of federal employees per 1,000 people
    in the U.S. population has decreased from over 14
    in the early 1970s to a little over 10 by the
    late 1990s.
  • Bureaucrats hold a huge variety of jobs, but most
    federal employees are white-collar workers, such
    as secretaries, clerks, lawyers, inspectors, and
    engineers.
  • Nearly 20,000 federal civilian employees work in
    U.S. territories, and another 100,000 work in
    foreign nations.

13
Organization of the Bureaucracy
  • The Cabinet Departments
  • Independent Regulatory Agencies
  • Government Corporations
  • Independent Executive Agencies

14
Cabinet Departments
  • The Department of State (founded in 1789)
  • The Department of Treasury (founded in 1789)
  • The Department of Defense (created in 1947, but
    replaced the Department of War, founded in 1789)
  • The Department of Justice (created in 1870 to
    serve the attorney general, a position created by
    George Washington in 1789)
  • The Department of the Interior (created in 1849)
  • The Department of Agriculture (created in 1862)
  • The Department of Commerce (created in 1903 as
    the Department of Commerce and Labor)

15
Cabinet Departments cont.
  • The Department of Labor (separated from the
    Department of Commerce in 1913)
  • The Department of Health and Human Services
    (created as the Department of Health, Education,
    and Welfare in 1953)
  • The Department of Housing and Urban Development
    (created in 1966)
  • The Department of Transportation (created in
    1966)
  • The Department of Energy (created in 1977)
  • The Department of Education (separated from the
    Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in
    1979)
  • The Department of Veterans Affairs (created in
    1988)
  • The Department of Homeland Security (created in
    2002)

16
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17
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18
Independent Regulatory Agencies
  • The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) -
    Founded in 1887, the ICC is the oldest of the
    regulatory agencies. It first regulated
    railroads, but now oversees trucking as well.
  • The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) - The FTC
    regulates business practices and controls
    monopolies
  • The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) - The
    NLRB regulates labor-management relations.
  • The Federal Reserve Board (FRB) - The FRB governs
    banks and regulates the supply of money.
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) -
    The SEC polices the stock market.

19
Government Corporations
  • The Corporation for Public Broadcasting
  • The Tennessee Valley Authority
  • The U.S. Postal Service
  • Amtrak

20
Independent Executive Agencies
  • The General Services Administration (GSA) - The
    GSA operates and maintains federal properties,
    handling buildings, supplies, and purchasing.
  • The National Science Foundation (NSF) - The NSF
    supports scientific research.
  • The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
    (NASA) - NASA administers the United States space
    program, financing ventures into space since 1958.

21
Iron Triangles
CONGRESS
INTEREST GROUPS
BUREAUCRACY
Iron Triangle - three-way alliance among
legislators, bureaucrats, and interest groups to
make or preserve policies that benefit their
respective interests
22
Iron Triangles
23
How it works?
  • Everyone in the triangle has a similar interest
  • Legislators get funding from interest groups and
    make laws reality with the help of the
    bureaucracy
  • Interest groups provide valued information to
    bureaucrats and money to legislators
  • Bureau chiefs implement legislator policy and
    interest group goals.

24
Why are they iron?
  • Strong bond cant be broken by President or
    Congress
  • Referred to as sub governments, all the real
    decisions are made among these 3 groups
  • Might maintain interests that might not be
    publicly popular like what?

25
Department of Defense
26
Department of Education
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