Personal Survival at the Policy Nexus
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Many expressed the view that PAS service was a privilege and an honor: "It's a great experience to come in and serve the country." However, PASs have to learn to protect themselves and to build in successes along the way, if they are not to burn out in the process of serving their president and country. As one PAS noted, "The opportunity to feel you've done something is less than it is in academia where you can build up a program or develop a school. You have to create those opportunities" to do something.
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As discussed in previous chapters, the nomination and confirmation process can be one of extended length, great complexity, and stressful uncertainty. Sometimes confirmation delay is the fault of the White House, sometimes the Senate, but rarely is it pleasant or easy.
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Self-protection in the face of personal criticism loomed large in many PASs' comments. "Be preparedit's not a glory job, prepare yourself for criticism. Regardless of what you do, Congress will just criticize, not praise," said one.
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Others spoke of the intensity of the work, particularly in hot-button agencies like Health and Human Services where PASs are likely to work eighty-hour weeks and receive calls at home at all hours of the day and night. The toll this takes on one's family was a point of consideration for more than a few. Stress, as discussed in chapter 8, is an ever-present problem for PASs. As the CIA's Studeman said, "Managing your health is a big issue around town. You have to develop stress management techniques or this town will run you over and kill you deader than a doornail. You have to avoid getting emotionally tied to it." Said another, "You have to keep stress under control or you don't do the job well, you can't be effective, and you end up cheating your family."
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The social pressures of Washington also got to some. "Washington is a very demanding, expensive townthe in-crowd social expectations could easily dominate your entire life," said one PAS.
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Trends in the Institution of the Presidential Appointment System and Its Appointees
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While political prognostication is always a risky proposition, it seems to be the favorite pastime in the nation's capital. Some trends, issues, and questions relevant to the future of the institution of the presidential appointment system and its yield, the PASs, can be culled from the Bush PAS Survey and interviews: they are worth noting.
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