The Reagan administration's approach had other negative impacts on political-career relations. Because it placed an overriding emphasis on political responsiveness, it created problems for careerists in that it "neither valued nor tolerated more traditional public management perspectives," their area of expertise. This, in turn, poisoned the atmosphere, creating "an environment of hostility and lack of trust in some agencies." Further, Reagan's appointees managed to move career managers "out of the decisionmaking loop" in some agencies, making them, "in a very basic sense . . . superfluous to decisionmaking" (ibid., 158).
|
The politicization and centralization of power within the White House during Reagan's activist presidency was a "continuation and acceleration of the developmental logic apparent in the Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon years." But more than that, Reagan's success at strengthening the institutional presidency meant that he built "a set of administrative arrangements that by past standards proved coherent, well integrated, and eminently workable." These arrangements would also provide a model for future presidents (Moe 1991, 153, 157).
|
| | Not surprisingly, the Reagan administration is typically viewed as anti-bureaucracy. Nathan (1983), Newland (1983), Ingraham (1987), Kirschten (1983), Rosen (1981), Carroll et al. (1985), and Pfiffner (1985) have noted the anti-bureaucratic rhetoric and tone of the administration. Rubin (1985), Waterman (1989), and Harris and Milkis (1989) have studied administration treatment of specific regulatory and social welfare organizations and found that the Reagan appointees did in fact seem more intent on limiting organization missions than enhancing efficiency. (Maranto 1993, 683)
|
However, this view must be placed in context. It is clear that organizations whose goals were in conflict with administration ideals (such as social welfare and regulatory agencies) indeed experienced antibureaucratic administration. However, organizations with "ideologically neutral missions" experienced less tension, and relations in the defense bureaucracies were positively harmonious. "In short, the Reagan administration cannot be considered anti-bureaucracy as such; rather, it opposed bureaucracies with liberal missions and embraced those with conservative missions," such as the defense organizations (ibid., 696).
|
This administrative presidency also built on the changes of the Nixon years, transforming the nature of the bureaucracy itself. Selective promotion in the upper civil service grades, beginning with Nixon and picking up speed over the long Reagan years, along with changing ideas in society,
|
|