The Executive Branch/Bureaucracy
I. Introduction: The EPA Survives
Morale at the Environmental Protection Agency was low when
William Ruckelshaus was appointed to head the agency. His
predecessor, Ann Gorsuch, regarded agency career personnel as
the enemy. In turn, career administrators thought that
Gorsuch was a violator of the EPA's mission.
As part of the Reagan administration, Gorsuch (and Secretary
of the Interior James Watt) oversaw the lax enforcement of
environmental laws and established a cooperative arrangement
with the business community. The trouble at the EPA reached
a head when committees in the House, which was controlled by the Democratic party, opened hearings on mismanagement and
fraud at the agency.
To repair the damage to his administration, President Reagan
changed top administrators at the EPA, appointing William
Ruckelshaus to replace Gorsuch. Ruckelshaus was a skilled
Washington insider who had held several important
administrative posts in the past. He was respected for his
integrity and managerial skills and was widely admired by EPA
career and professional employees, as well as by
environmental organizations.
Although the Ruckelshaus appointment quieted much of the
criticism of President Reagan's environmental policy, the
cost to the president was high. Reagan was forced to abandon
one of the central elements in his program to get government
off the backs of the business community.
This story demonstrates that the executive branch is not
simply a bureaucratic extension of the president's will.
Political and governmental influences, such as interest
groups, Congress, the media, and public opinion, shape the
kind of bureaucracy we have as do structural factors such as
the Constitution, the economy, and political culture.
II. Characterizing the U.S. Bureaucracy
Structural Influences
A. A Hostile Political Culture
Americans do not trust government; nor do they think it can
accomplish most tasks assigned to it. They believe, on the
whole, that the private sector can usually do a better job.
This hostile environment influences the bureaucracy in
several ways. The public bureaucracy is surrounded by more
statutory restrictions and is subject to more intense
legislative oversight than bureaucracies in other democratic
nations. Moreover, because civil servants have so little
prestige, many of the most talented people in American
society avoid jobs in government. Finally, the highest
policymaking positions in the executive branch are closed to
civil servants and are reserved for presidential political
appointees. This is not true in other democracies.
B. Incoherent Organization
The federal bureaucracy is an organizational hodgepodge. It
does not follow the classic pyramidal form. There are few
clear lines of control, responsibility, and accountability.
Some bureaucratic units have no place at all in relationship
to other agencies and departments. A major reason for this
is that the bureaucracy was built piece by piece over the
years in a political system without a strong central
government.
C. Divided Control
Bureaucratic agencies have two bosses--the president and
Congress--who, because of the constitutional separation of
powers with checks and balances, struggle for control of the
bureaucracy.
D. Open and Porous
Because of incoherent organization, the lack of a chain of
command with clear lines of authority and accountability, and
divided control at the top, the U.S. bureaucracy is open and
porous. It is possible to get a hearing and a response from
bureaucrats without necessarily starting at the top, as one
would have to do in many other countries. This provides a
fertile ground for interest groups.
III. Transformation of the Executive Branch
The Structural Context
Executive Departments and officers are mentioned in the
Constitution only in an indirect, offhand way. The
Constitution neither specifies the number or kinds of
departments to be established nor describes other executive
agencies.
A. A Brief Administrative History of the United States
The role of the federal government and the scale of
bureaucracy have changed because of changes in structural
factors, such as the U.S. economy, the nation's population,
and the role of America in the world. Until the Civil War,
the federal government had few responsibilities and the
administrative apparatus of the executive branch was
relatively undeveloped.
The problems and opportunities created by rapid population
growth, westward expansion, the Industrial Revolution,
economic instability, and the emergence of giant corporations
in the last quarter of the nineteenth century gradually
changed people's thinking about the appropriate
responsibilities of government and the size of the
bureaucracy.
The rise of large corporations in the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries, and the problems caused by them,
also contributed to a rethinking of the role of the federal
government.
The Great Depression forever changed how Americans thought
about government. President Franklin Roosevelt and Congress
responded to economic collapse, widespread social distress,
and serious threats of violence and social conflict with a
range of new programs, including government-supported jobs
for the unemployed, poor relief, Social Security, regulation
of banks and the securities industry, agricultural subsidy
programs, collective bargaining, and programs to encourage
business expansion.
Needless to say, these initiatives contributed to an
expansion in the size of the federal bureaucracy. World War
II, the Cold War with the Soviet Union, and America's new
role as a superpower, also brought a substantial increase in
the federal government's responsibilities and in the size of
the executive branch. During the 1960s and 1970s, successful
social reform movements and important changes in public
opinion convinced political leaders to take on new
responsibilities in the areas of civil rights, urban affairs,
environmental and consumer protection, and education.
IV. Bureaucracy
Bureaucracies are generally defined as large organizations,
in which people with specialized knowledge are organized into
a clearly defined hierarchy of bureaus or offices, each of
which has a specific mission. There is a clear chain of
command in which each person has one and only one boss or
supervisor, and a set of formal rules to guide behavior.
Moreover, appointment and advancement are based on merit
rather than inheritance, power, or election.
A major advantage of a bureaucratic organization is its
ability to organize large tasks. Hierarchical organizations
with clear chains of command are able to mobilize and
coordinate the efforts of thousands of people. Another
advantage of bureaucracies is the concentration of
specialized talent that is found in them. Despite the
complaints and jokes about bureaucracy, it has considerable
advantages as a form of organization.
V. How the Executive Branch is Organized
The executive branch includes several different kinds of
administrative units. Departments are headed by cabinet-
level secretaries, appointed by the president and approved by the Senate. Departments carry out the most essential
government functions. The first three were War, State, and
Treasury.
Over the years, departments were added as the need arose or
as powerful groups in society demanded it. Sometimes
departments are formed as a way for a president and members
of Congress to signal a new national commitment or to cement
political alliances with important constituencies. For
example, Lyndon Johnson persuaded Congress to create the
Department of Housing and Urban Development in 1965 and the
Department of Transportation in 1967 for these reasons.
Subdivisions within cabinet departments are known as bureaus
and agencies.
Government corporations, independent regulatory commissions,
and independent executive agencies comprise the rest of the
executive branch. Government corporations are agencies that
operate in a market setting and are organized much like
private companies. They can sell stock, retain and reinvest
earnings, and borrow money. They are created to perform some
crucial economic activity that private investors are
unwilling or unable to perform. Amtrak, for instance, was
created to provide passenger rail service after the virtual
collapse of the private customer rail industry.
Independent regulatory commissions, such as the Securities
and Exchange Commission or the Interstate Commerce
Commission, are responsible for regulating those sectors of
the economy where the free market does not work properly to
protect public interests. Agencies which do not fit into any
of the departments and are not corporations or regulatory
commissions are referred to as independent executive
agencies.
VI. What Do Bureaucrats Do?
A. Executing the Law
Although the term executive branch suggests the branch of the
federal government that carries out the law, executing the
law is not always easy. It is not always clear what the law
is. To be sure, Congress sometimes passes a law with clearly
stated goals and procedures to guide the actions of the
president and the bureaucrats in the executive branch.
Oftentimes, however, Congress passes laws that are vague
about goals and short on procedural guidelines. Congress may
do so because its members believe that something should be
done about a particular social problem but don't know how to
solve the problem or disagree among themselves as to the best
solution.
B. Rule Making
A great deal of law is made by bureaucrats because Congress
often gives bureaucratic agencies the power to write specific
rules. Because the problems government must face are
complex, Congress tends to create an agency, specify the job
to be done, and then leaves it to the agency to use its
expertise to accomplish the task. Although some critics
believe that Congress delegates too much authority to the executive branch, it is difficult to see what alternatives it
has. Congress can change the rules written by bureaucrats if
they drift too far from congressional intent or constituent
desires.
C. Adjudicating
Congress gives some executive branch agencies the power to
conduct quasi-judicial proceedings in which disputes are
resolved. The decisions of an administrative law judge have
the force law unless they are overturned for a federal court
on appeal. The National Labor Relations Board is an example
of a bureaucratic agency which adjudicates disputes between
labor and management on matters concerning federal labor
laws.
VII. Who Are the Bureaucrats?
A. The Merit Services
The executive branch has three personnel systems: the career
civil service, separate merit service in specific agencies,
and political appointees. From the election of Andrew
Jackson in 1828 until the late nineteenth century, the
executive branch was staffed through what is known as the
spoils system or patronage system. The shortcomings of this
system (which were displayed during the Civil War) led to the
establishment of a system of appointment to executive branch
posts on the basis of merit. Today, competitive examinations
are used to determine merit for about 58 percent of
all federal employees.
B. Who Are Civil Servants?
In strictly demographic terms, the civil service is filled
with people who are similar to other Americans. Educational
levels, regional origins, average incomes, and age
distribution almost exactly match that of the general
population. Their political beliefs and opinions are similar
to those of other Americans, though they tend to be somewhat
more Democratic and slightly more liberal than the national
average. A few anomalies do exist, however. For example,
women and minorities are over-represented in the lowest civil
service grades and underrepresented in the highest grades.
C. Political Appointees
The highest policymaking positions in the federal bureaucracy
such as department secretaries, assistants to the president
in the White House Office, and leading officials in the
Central Intelligence Agency do not enter government service
by way of competitive merit examinations but by presidential
appointment.
These top patronage positions, in theory at least, allow the
president to translate his electoral mandate into public
policy by permitting him to put his people in key
policymaking jobs. To be sure, presidents want to appoint
experienced people to these posts who are familiar with the
work of the department or agency, but policy and ideological
agreement with the president and party loyalty are equally
important.
Unlike the vast majority of federal government
employees covered by civil service regulations, top political
appointees are not representative of the American people.
One study covering the years 1897 to 1973 found that over 90
percent of all cabinet officials belonged to the social elite
or to the business elite.
VIII. The Federal Bureaucracy and Democracy
A. Popular Sovereignty
Popular sovereignty refers to the fit between what the people
want and what the government does. It requires that the
bureaucracy be accountable to the people. While scrutiny by
the public is an important instrument of democratic control,
most Americans have no opinions about bureaucratic agencies.
There are, however, some exceptions to this rule. Some
bureaucratic agencies, perhaps because of their size or their
impact, or the media attention that they receive, are
constantly in the public eye. The Internal Revenue Service
is one such agency.
A disaster or string of disasters can focus public attention
on an agency. A handful of agencies like the FBI are adept
at shaping public opinion in their favor. Public opinion is
also sometimes conveyed to bureaucrats by social movements.
For the most part, public opinion controls the federal
bureaucracy only indirectly and intermittently. For
popular sovereignty to be effective, it usually must work
through elected officials such as the president and the
Congress who are themselves accountable to the people.
The president's leadership position is recognized in the
Constitution's grant of executive power, its designation of
the president as commander in chief of the armed forces, and
its charge that he ensure that the laws be faithfully
executed. In reality, however, the president has only
limited abilities to control the executive branch. Virtually
every modern president has been frustrated by the discovery
that he cannot assume that bureaucrats will do what he wants
them to do.
There are several reasons for this. One has to do with the
sheer size and complexity of the executive branch. There is
so much going on, in so many agencies, involving the activity
of tens of thousands of people, that simply keeping abreast
of what is going on is no easy task. Moreover, because of
civil service regulations, presidents have no say about the
tenure or salary of most bureaucrats. Bureaucratic agencies
are insulated against presidential efforts to control them
because of agency alliances with powerful interest groups.
There are ways that the president can encourage bureaucratic
compliance outside of a crisis or national emergency. The
president's prestige as the only nationally elected political
leader makes his wishes hard to ignore. A popular president
who can speak for the nation is difficult to resist. If a
president is careful in filling appointive positions with
people who support him and his program, he greatly increases
his ability to have his way.
The president's power as chief budget officer of the federal
government is also a formidable tool of administration. No
agency of the federal bureaucracy, for example, is allowed
under the law to make its own budget request directly to
Congress. But even with all of these factors in his favor,
the president is still relatively limited in his ability to
act as chief executive. Except for his control over the
military, his ability to demand obedience from bureaucrats is
not impressive.
The president and Congress share control over the executive
branch. Congressional tools of control, in fact, are at
least as formidable as those of the president. Congress
legislates the mission of bureaucratic agencies and specifies the details of their organization. Congress can also alter
agency policy or behavior to a great extent by controlling
the budgetary process. Oversight is the way in which
Congress assures itself that the laws it has passed are
carried out in a way that is satisfactory to it.
Because Congress is a highly fragmented and decentralized
institution with power dispersed among scores of
subcommittees, confusion about congressional intent is
common. A skilled administrator can often play off these
competing forces against each other and gain a degree of
autonomy for his or her agency, thus reducing accountability
and control.
B. Political Equity
In several respects, the bureaucracy meets the standard of
political equality. There is no reason to believe that
federal agencies treat classes of citizens unequally on a
regular basis, although there are occasional incidents in
which some have been treated unfairly. The American people
are fairly well represented, both in a demographic sense and
in terms of their outlooks, among federal workers, except at
the level of political appointees. In another important
respect, however, the standard of political equality is not
met, namely in the overrepresentation of some interest
groups. In most cases, the interests that are
over-represented are business interests.
C. Political Liberty
It is difficult to reach a firm conclusion about the role of
the federal bureaucracy in protecting and sustaining
political liberty because it is composed of so many agencies.
For the most part, these agencies go about their business
without affecting political liberty one way or the other.
Nevertheless, there are at least two things that worry many
observers. First, the combination of bureaucracy and
contemporary computer technology gives the federal government enormous information-gathering capabilities. In the hands of
unscrupulous officials, this information might be used to intimidate individuals. Second, while federal agencies do
not normally intrude on the liberty of Americans, enough of
them have done so to cause concern among those who cherish
freedom.
IX. The Federal Bureaucracy: Common Criticisms
A. Criticism Number 1: The Federal Bureaucracy Is Always
Expanding
Although the number of federal civilian employees expanded
dramatically in the early twentieth century, it has remained
relatively stable since the mid-1960s, at roughly 2.8
million. Government does more and spends more money today
than it did in 1950, but it does so with about the same
number of employees.
B. Criticism Number 2: The Federal Bureaucracy Is Not
Effective
We define effectiveness as the ability to carry out missions
and reach goals. The record of the federal bureaucracy with
respect to effectiveness is mixed. The framers, you will
recall, were willing to trade effectiveness for inoculation
against an overbearing and threatening government. Moreover,
the federal bureaucracy was not designed as a rational
machine with a clear chain of command, as in most democratic
nations. It was instead, an architectural hodgepodge, with
parts added on as the political process demanded. Finally,
while most of us are absolutely certain that the federal
bureaucracy cannot be as effective in meeting its goals as
private organizations, the evidence for such a belief is not
overwhelming.
C. Criticism Number 3: The Federal Bureaucracy Is Wasteful
and Inefficient
Waste in government is an enduring theme in American
politics. In actuality, however, the opportunity for
agencies to waste money is limited, since the bureaucracy has
discretionary control over only about five percent of the
total federal budget. The rest is earmarked, or distributed
to beneficiaries by formula or entitlement. In addition, the
use of the small discretionary pot is closely monitored and
encumbered with strict rules on its use.
D. Criticism Number 4: The Federal Bureaucracy Is Buried in
Red Tape
We have all, at one time or another, felt stymied by rules
and procedures, aggravated by delays, and frustrated by
forms. But how can we be sure that there is more red tape in
the federal bureaucracy than there is in other large
institutions? The charge of red tape is almost always hurled
at agencies that are carrying out policies which we don't
like. For example, following federal procedures for the
disposal of dangerous chemicals may not be what chemical
companies would want to do on their own, but Americans
have shown that they want strong environmental protection
laws.
X. Reforming the Federal Bureaucracy
A. Scaling the Bureaucracy Down to Size
People who worry about the size of government have proposed
several changes, including hiring freezes, restrictions on
the creation of new departments and bureaus, and even the
elimination of bureaucratic units. The most popular reform
idea of the Reagan years was privatization, the transfer of
many government functions to the private sector.
B. Making the Federal Bureaucracy More Effective
Many people believe that, for the federal bureaucracy to
achieve its goals, policymakers must first provide clear
policy signals. Others suggest greater discretion for civil
servants as they carry out their responsibilities.
C. Protecting Against Bureaucratic Abuses of Power
Many critics believe that a bureaucracy the size and shape of
our present one, while necessary in a modern society, is
potentially dangerous. Closer control over the bureaucracy
by elected political bodies and by clear legislative
constraints has been the preferred solution. There are many
legislative enactments that try to keep bureaucratic activity within narrow boundaries.
Reformers have proposed two additional innovations. The
first innovation would require that each federal agency have
an ombudsman, an official whose job is to hear citizen
complaints about bureaucratic action (or inaction) and to
seek redress of grievances. The second innovation would
offer protection for whistleblowers, those bureaucrats who
report abuses of power, corruption, financial mismanagement,
or other official malfeasance.
D. Increasing Popular Participation
Many people worry that federal bureaucrats go about their
business without the public having much say in what they do.
Without citizen input, it is argued, bureaucrats lose touch
with the people whom they serve. Citizen participation in
agency affairs has been pushed by some reformers as a
solution.
E. Enhancing Democracy
There are, finally, proposals to enhance democracy in
bureaucratic affairs. For the people to rule, popular
sovereignty, political equality, and political liberty must
flourish. Popular sovereignty requires that the elected
representatives of the people closely control the
bureaucracy. Popular sovereignty implies that administrative
discretion be narrowed as much as possible and that clear
directions and unambiguous policies be communicated from
elected officials to bureaucratic agencies.
Some observers have argued that the best way to achieve this
is through increasing the powers of the president so he can,
in fact and not just in name, be the chief executive.
Another way to enhance the ability of elected leaders to
issue clear directives and coherent policies is to have them
speak with a more unified voice. But this, we have seen, is
unlikely to happen in our constitutional system of separation
of powers and divided government.
The most significant reform to enhance political equality
involves diminishing the power and influence of interest
groups. Because the interest group system is the most
significant factor in American political life that works to
undermine political equality, a change in this system is
necessary if political equality is to be enhanced.
To the extent that bureaucratic intrusions on political
liberty involve autonomous agencies following their own
agendas, such as the FBI under Hoover, enhancing the control
of elected officials over them would represent an important
safeguard to liberty. Such reforms would not, however,
completely guarantee the protection of liberty from
bureaucratic action. What remains to us in the face
of violations of our rights is our constitutional tradition,
that is, our willingness to stand up for our rights and the
rights of others.