114). He made extensive use of the tools of appointment, budget, and reorganization powers.
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Preparing the way for Ronald Reagan, Nixon's administrative strategy also involved claims of executive authority, as in his attempts at budget impoundment to achieve policy goals, and a general "go it alone" attitude vis-à-vis the Congress. So-called executive privilege was used extensively by Nixon to shield his office from congressional inquiry. He set the White House over and against not only the Congress, but also against the rest of the executive branch, making broad use of the president's appointment powers to procure heads of domestic civilian agencies who were opposed to the basic mission and goal of the agencies they administered (ibid., 114-15).
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Not unlike President Eisenhower, Richard Nixon came into the White House with the conservative's bias against big government and its bureaucracy, suspicious of a career civil service that had spent the past eight years working at the behest of Democratic social policies (Aberbach 1976, 466-67). According to Nathan,
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| | The plan for an "administrative presidency" helps to explain Nixon's entire domestic policy. The roots of this plan were in the experience of his first term. The president and John D. Ehrlichman, his chief domestic advisor, came to the conclusion sometime in late 1971 or early 1972 that, in most areas of domestic affairs, operations constitute policy. Much of the day-to-day management of domestic programsregulation writing, grant approval, personnel development, agency organization and reorganization, program oversight, and budget apportionmentcan involve high-level policymaking. Getting control over these processes was the aim of the President's strategy; and judged against the lack of legislative success on domestic issues in the first term, there are grounds for concluding that this was a rational objective. (Nathan 1975, 70)
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While the regulatory agencies and smaller administrative units generally were spared a direct attack, "the (Nixon) administrative presidency focused on the big-spending cabinet agencies, especially Health, Education, and Welfare, Housing and Urban Development, Labor, Transportation, and Interior." Thus, Nixon's New Federalism was considered by many to be nothing more than an "elaborate rationale for paring down social spending" (ibid., 26, vii-viii).
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"Nixon and his White House loyalists increasingly saw themselves as pursued by three demons: the press, Congress, and the federal bureaucracy." To counter the press, his staff developed innovative techniques for
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