they hope to be employed in postgovernment service. Further, ethics regulations place restrictions of one year or more on the type of work they can perform, post-PAS service. Others cannot afford the break in their careers or the drop in salary such positions may carry (Heclo 1987, 210-11).
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The increase and downward filtration of PASs lead to what one PAS termed a bureaucratic lobotomy, because with a change of administrations or even the departure of a lower-level appointee, "the people who could educate the assistant secretaries were gone too," thus seriously hampering an agency's effectiveness (ibid., 208). According to Fred Malek, Nixon's personnel chief, "In many cases, the effectiveness of an agency would be improved and political appointments would be reduced by roughly 25% if line positions beneath the assistant secretary level were reserved for career officials" (Pfiffner 1987c, 63).
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Additionally, the overabundance of lower-level PASs and their claims to a political mandate lead to devaluation of "the coin of political executive leadership" in others' eyes. As one Reagan PAS put it, somewhat wistfully, "Washington is filled with people who used to be something, so that we're not really anybody anymore" (Heclo 1987, 209).
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There are other factors that contribute to make political jobs less desirable:
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| | Washington positions, even when avidly sought, are generally seen as short-term appointments. They are accepted to cap a political avocation, to take a career break, or more often, as a duty which must be rendered to the party, candidate or nation. Although this may be changing, an executive rarely receives a tangible reward from his law firm or company for serving his country. He may even lose his place on the promotion ladder. (Rehfuss 1973, 131)
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These factors make for a lessened commitment that imposes an additional bureaucratic burden on the system in terms of energy and shortened tenure.
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There are other pressures on the PASs. As they work at the pleasure of the president, there is no job security, legal recourse if fired, or severance provisions. The workload is intense, with work weeks of sixty to seventy hours the norm. PASs' actions are subject to second-guessing in Washington's fishbowl atmosphere, with press and professional peers watching every move. Rehfuss's evaluation of the situation in 1973 is no less relevant today: "A reputation can be made and unmade in a few short days, and the necessity of protecting one's positions from attack is always present" (ibid., 135).
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The crucial asymmetry between PASs and careerists discussed in
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