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The Federal Bureaucracy

The Federal Bureaucracy

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The Federal Bureaucracy

The combination of people, procedures, and agencies through which the federal government operates makes up the FEDERAL BUREAUCRACY. A bureaucracy is a complex system of organization. Article II, section 2 of the Constitution says that the President may need to consult with the principle officer in each of the executive departments. Other than this vague reference, the Constitution is silent.

The bureaucracy is administered by the executive branch,

and is regulated by the legislative

branch.

Executive Offi ce of the Presidency

S c ience & Technology

Drug Control Policy

OMB

Policy Development

NEC

US Trade Rep.

NS C

Offi ce of Administration

Environment Equality

President Vice President White House Offi ce

Development of an Executive Staff:

•Employment of first paid presidential clerk, 1857

•Employment of three secretaries & five assistants, 1939

•Reorganization Act (1939) this established the Executive Office of the President & expanded advisors of the president into the White House Staff.

The White House Staff Duties:

Provides advice to the President, creates policy options, channels and

organizes information, write speeches and policy papers, organizes the schedule of the

President, controls access to the president, monitors & maintains

contact with the executive bureaucracy.

Key Individuals in the White House Staff . . .

Chief of Staff: organizes staff; controls access to the President

Press Secretary: Handles & schedules press briefings & conferences; prepares press releases

First Lady: Ceremonial hostess since Dolly Madison: Hillary Rodham Clinton & Eleanor Roosevelt have not served as hostesses, but have taken an active role in assisting their husbands.Vice-President: Presiding officer of Senate; after 1950, unofficial duties increased.

Executive Office of the President:

•Office of Management & Budget (OMB), 1970: prepares the budget of the president to be sent to Congress.

•Management of the deficit.

•Monitoring of funds allocated by Congress

•Overseer of Federal bureaucracy

National Security Council:

Members are the president, Vice-President, Secretaries of Defense

& State; In attendance are Director of the CIA and the

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

Duties: Advice to President on national security issues

Office of Policy Development:

Chairman & Staff; Assists the President in policy development, providing of information non domestic matters.

Council of Economic Advisors:

Three economists who provide info on the state of the economy for the US; assist the President with messages about economy to Congress.

Other Offices . . .

*Council on Environmental Quality

*Office of Science & Technology

*Office of US Trade Representative

*Office of the Vice-President

*Intelligence Oversight Board

*Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board

*Office of National Drug Control

The rest of the bureaucracy:

The Cabinet

Independent Executive Agencies

Independent Regulatory Agencies

Regulatory Agencies

Public Corporations

Cabinet: Advice to the President in particular area of expertise. Cabinet Offices:

1. State 15. Dept. of Homeland Security

2. Treasury

3. War (now Defense)

4. Interior

5. Justice

6. Agriculture

7. Commerce

8. Labor

9. Health, Education & welfare

10. Housing & Urban Development

11. Transportation

12. Energy

13. Education

14. Veterans Affairs

Independent Executive Agencies:

Executive organizations without Cabinet level affiliation. Examples: NASA, EPA, & CIA

Top administrator, appointed by the President without senate approval; Congress restricts through budget and oversight.

Independent Regulatory Agencies:

Congressionally formed bipartisan agencies; independent of the President & Congress.

Examples: FCC, FTC, ICC

Holds hearing to determine violations.

Made of of a bipartisan board, with lengthy, staggered terms; appointed by the President, approved by Senate

Regulatory Agencies:

Examples: FDA, OHSHA, IRS, Federal Reserve System

Regulates economic activity;

Appointed by President without Senate approval; Congress restricts through budget & oversight.

Public Corporations:

Created by legislative charters.

Example: FDIC, TVE, US Postal Service

Board of Directors to create policy; General manger to implement policy; appointed by President with Senate approval; budget appropriated by Congress; government ownership of stock.

Influences on the Bureaucracy:

Congress: creates new departments, agencies, commissions, controls budgets, maintains of civil service system.

President: Overall coordination of the bureaucracy; appoints leadership, most times with Senate approval; submits annual budget to the Congress; power to reform and reorganize bureaucracy.

Problems with a bureaucracy:

Poor coordination between & among departments, agencies, commissions.

Rigid, maybe unclear guidelines and regulations.

Huge bureaucracy in 20th Century.

A whole bunch of red tape.