sanguine view of Carter's feelings about the bureaucracy might be more accurate:
|
| | While Carter's preelection rhetoric was anti-bureaucratic, . . . unlike Nixon and Reagan, he did not identify the bureaucrats as the primary cause of the problem. His interest was less focused on dismantling particular bureaucracies and eliminating career jobs. This probably resulted in less conflict between the political appointees and career bureaucrats in the Carter administration, despite his apparent dislike for bureaucracy. (Joyce 1990a, 142)
|
It took Ronald Reagan in his campaign against Washington to turn the outsider's stance to full advantage. Rather than attempting a reorganization of the bureaucracy, he simply gutted and circumvented it. It was a strategy focused on command relationships and processes rather than on formal structure. It was, indeed, an administrative strategy of centralization that could bypass the recalcitrant Congress and bring the career bureaucracy to heel. The primary elements of this strategy were centralization of the budgetary, appointments, and decision-making processes and control and reduction of regulations (Seidman and Gilmour 1986, 127). Reagan's assault on the bureaucracy was direct, unmistakable, and involved massive personnel changes.
|
| | While moving ideologically screened appointees in, the administration also moved career federal employees out. From January 1981 to September 1983, the civilian (not including Post Office or Defense) employment of the government dropped by 92,0007.4%from 1,240,000 to 1,148,000. Twelve thousand employees lost their jobs as a result of reductions in force (RIFs) in FY 1981 and 1982. . . . Also, the administration made generous use of the provisions of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 to reassign executives from one job or geographic location to another, resulting in some controversial and well-publicized resignations. (Salamon and Abramson 1984, 46-47)
|
Reagan's policy of privatizing and providing (if pushed) but not producing services through contracting out had an additional unexpected impact on the career civil service, reducing its role and authority. The new style of "administration through third parties converted the role of many senior career executives to that of grant and contract administrators, paymasters, and regulation writers and enforcers." Less and less deliverers of
|
|