The President's Call: Executive Leadership From FDR to George Bush (68 page)

BOOK: The President's Call: Executive Leadership From FDR to George Bush
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One Bush secretary had a habit of surrounding himself with Schedule Cs, creating layers of bureaucracy between himself and the other appointees and between himself and the careerists, the classic problem of having too many appointees. As one careerist observed, "Maybe it's because he wanted to get things done in a hurry, but it's like putting a moat around the secretary."
One PAS, noting the claim that appointees bring fresh points of view and fresh blood to government, said, "Well, make of it what you will-not all of them are insightful and dynamic and not all [career] bureaucrats are tired. Judgment is the key ingredient for an able person."
Was There a Discernable Difference Between Reagan's and Bush's Appointees?
PASs' opinions about the differences between Ronald Reagan's and George Bush's appointees went in all directions. Few were for attribution; most of the comments that follow were made off the record.
Often, interviewees noted that many of the PASs in all three administrations (Reagan 1 and 2 and Bush) were the same people. The differences on which interviewees remarked usually started with the appointer. Ronald Reagan had a vision of what government should beminimal: everything he did and every appointment he made was with an eye to that vision, to paring back government, which he defined as "the problem."
Table 7.5. Differences Between Ronald Reagan and George Bush
Ronald Reagan
George Bush
Mission
clear goals
no mission, except to stay in office
Power
no power struggles among administration
lots of independent power groups
Structure
as long as you are accomplishing your goals who cares about structure?
lots of arguments over structurelittle goal change from Reagan because no clear mission
Source:
Gerald Shaw, Senior Executive Association counsel.
 
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Gerald Shaw, counsel for the Senior Executive Association, characterized the differences between Reagan and Bush with a quick sketch (see table 7.5).
George Bush had trouble defining what he called "the vision thing," so he could not get to "the problem." As numerous pundits observed during the campaign of 1992, the reason he wanted to win was so that he could stay in office, where he felt he had a right to be: he wanted to win because he wanted to win. Unlike Reagan, who made his vision simple to the point of simplistic, Bush could not articulate a vision of where he wanted to take the country-he had no single, clear message around which voters could rally.
His appointments and personnel actions reflect that lack of focus. When the Far Right gave him grief he would give them an appointmenta surgeon general who did not believe in the right to abortion or a director of the office of family planning who did not believe in birth control, for example. Sometimes he offered up a head on a platter, such as John Frohnmayer's (chief of the National Endowment for the Arts), when the Religious Right became art critics, or Edwin Derwinski's (secretary of Veterans Affairs), when the veterans' lobby got angry over the closing or reassignment of underutilized veterans' hospitals. But no matter how much Bush gave them, he could never give his detractors enough to allay their deep suspicion that he was not one of them.
8
According to some PASs, Bush often used IRC positions (except the chair) as political plums. This is a fairly safe thing to do, because the chair is the chief administrative officer and carries a great deal of weight in most IRCs. The other commissioners tend to follow her or his lead. However, when close votes are counted or lobbying is needed in Congress, the president does need strong, capable commissioners and so cannot afford to slough off on these appointments.
Most PASs were reluctant to distinguish between the two presidents' PASs. And, as many said Reagan's appointees were better as said Bush's were. Many did observe, though, that the Reagan White House was "more acutely attuned to political considerations" than the Bush White House. Said one, "It was a similar crowd, there wasn't a huge difference between them." But then he observed, "the Bush people were less ideological, more Washington-based, higher quality. Reagan dumped lower quality people, whom the PAS described as "low-quality hacks," at HHS and HUD, noting that one HHS chief of staff was convicted of fraud and served five months in prison.
Conversely, Bush was more likely, especially early on, to appoint people who believed in and cared about government.
 
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Bush put in place a cabinet and a White House staff that [foretold] a style of governance-a conscientious, relentlessly mainstream Republican administration filled with pragmatists who prize public niceness. Bush promised fresh faces but hired old friends. . . . Packed with skilled, centrist Washingtonians, Bush's cabinet ''could have been put together by the National Academy of Public Administration," Brookings Institution senior fellow Stephen Hess said. "These are people who won't make silly mistakes, people who are interested in governance." (Aberbach 1991, 239)
While no clear consensus about the differences in quality or competence between the Bush and Reagan people emerged in the interviews with the Bush PASs and careerists, some rather stark differences in characteristics did frequently appear (see table 7.6).
One PAS seemed somewhat wistful as she recalled the previous administration, noting differences not in skill or qualifications, but in philosophy and approach:
Ronald Reagan's PASs were more colorful, controversial, aggressive overall, and much more willing to fight. They had major knock-down fights over policy changes, blood all over the floor regarding export policies, for example. The Bush people seem to squelch fights down in the bureaucracy. This doesn't give the president the range of options he needs. Reagan allowed the turmoil to go on underneath-a lot more contentious issues went straight to him for resolution. In Bush, things get resolved lower down-any policy now going to the president has to have three policy options. . . . Colorful people don't show up as much in Bush's administration.
Ivan Selin, chair of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said,
The Bush people are much more professional than the Reagan people (that's not to say they're better). There is less personal aggrandizement, a higher ethical fiber. They're less likely to be looking out for themselves, thinking, "Where will this job take me?" than the Reagan people. However, there's less unity, less clear idea of where the administration is going. While Reagan had a simple, insufficiently nuanced policy, Bush is more pragmatic, less ideological. In general, his people are very competent-there's been no one like Energy Secretary Edwards [first head of the new department-a dentist with no energy policy experience].
When an administration brings in people who create scandals, isolate

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