Non-Transition Logjam
Executive branch administrative expert Paul Light, who seems to be the go-to guy for transition analysis, has a troubling essay in the NYTimes today. An excerpt [bold and italic emphasis added]:
...the presidential appointments process remains as cumbersome as ever. Every administration since 1961, first-term or second-term, has been later in filling its jobs than its predecessor, while every appointee has been more vulnerable to death by a thousand paper cuts.This is no way to run a government.
Much of the frustration comes from efforts to"scandal-proof" the government by treating every nominee, in the memorable phrase of one former White House aide, as innocent until nominated. Despite repeated calls to make the process more efficient, appointees still have to fill out more than 60 pages of forms, answer more than 240 questions, and supply reams of financial data - sorted in every which way. They still have to supply the dates and places of birth of their mothers- and fathers-in-law, a complete inventory of all foreign travel, including short trips to Mexico and Canada, and the name of a high school classmate who can vouch for their character. Many of the questions date back to the McCarthy era and serve no purpose for increasing confidence in the nominee, but they must be answered nonetheless. At least one of the forms is best completed by typewriter.
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Past appointees actually suffer from their prior service - the Federal Bureau of Investigation is obligated to cross-check their last set of forms against the new set, adding even more time to the process.
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it is the subcabinet that bears the brunt of the frustration and delay. Nominees to the subcabinet, defined as any position below that of secretary, waited almost nine months on average to enter office in Mr. Bush's first term. The federal hierarchy was not so much headless during the period as neckless. On July 11, 2001, for example, barely a quarter of the presidential appointees who would be involved in the war on terrorism had been either nominated or confirmed; on Sept. 11, the percentage was still well below half.
There are two obvious solutions ("There's always an easy solution to every human problem -- neat, plausible, and wrong." -- H. L. Mencken), one of which strengthens the President's hand and one of which weakens it, and by supporting both I hope to stake a claim to non-partisan interest in good government. First, as Light argues, the process needs to be streamlined so that background checks are meaningful but reasonably efficient. It doesn't seem too much to ask in the digital age, though I understand that too much efficiency in data collection does raise privacy concerns; still, nine months on average is absurd. Security is a real concern: increase the funding and staffing for background checks, an area which our government has been increasingly outsourcing and underfunding in recent years at all levels. This will make administrations more flexible in staffing, and quicker to get moving.
Second, reduce the political appointment layer of government. Even after winning, Bush is expected to need to make"300 to 400" new confirmation-level appointments, and a full transition could have involved as many as six thousand jobs to fill. This is absurd. We need experts, and we need loyal civil servants, and though there are certainly flaws in a civil service system, they are not as great as the flaws in a political patronage system; bureaucracy really is an advance over feudalism as a system of delegation and management. I really don't think that, given the choice, most Americans want their federal government politicized to this extent. I think, as a starting place, that the number of appointees, and confirmable appointeess, should be cut in half immediately, with further cuts, more carefully considered, to follow; most cuts preferably to be achieved by eliminating positions rather than entrenching current appointees.
Yes, this would weaken the impact, to some degree, of the presidency, but not that much, frankly. In conjunction with a streamlined appointment process, it would make the Executive Branch more responsive, responsible and effective.