| major charges against him had to be dropped. This carried the added benefit to the White House of protecting Reagan and Bush from further exposure to charges of complicity that might have been found in the documents.
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| 4. See chapter 3.
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| 5. Administrative discretion is also within the purview of careerists; subsequently, court involvement has curtailed their power, as discussed below.
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| 6. Discussion of this concept follows in chapter 3.
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| 7. This group of inexperienced PASs (71 percent, 101 of 142) stands in marked contrast to the Bush PASs, of whom, according to the Bush PAS Survey, 71 of 182 had been in a PAS position in Reagan's second administration, 34 in his first, 8 each in Ford's and Nixon's, and 5 in Carter's administrations. Sixty-seven of Bush's PASs had served in at least one SES position, 58 in at least one Schedule C position, and 94 in some other type of federal (nonmilitary) employment. Additionally, 77 had moved directly from federal government service to their initial PAS job and 10 came directly from state or local government service. Pfiffner reports that of the initial Bush White House staff, 24 of 29 had previous White House experience (Pfiffner 1990, 66). Clearly, the Bush people were a group well-versed in the ways of government service.
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| 8. R. H. Melton and Bill McAllister, "From Watergate to Whitewater, Ethics an Issue," Washington Post, October 21, 1996, Al.
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| 9. Howard Kurtz. "The Big Sleazy," Washington Post, March 26, 1995.
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| 10. Ibid.
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| 11. Melton and McAllister, "From Watergate to Whitewater," Al.
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| 12. "Nixon Suggests Vandalizing RNC Offices," Washington Post, February 15, 1997.
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3 Politicization and Depoliticization in the Nation's Pressure Cooker
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| 1. Over time, the presidential superstructure came to embrace the Council of Economic Advisers, the National Security Council, the President's Special Trade Representative, the Council on Environmental Quality, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, and other offices, all with sizeable staff. By 1987, the Executive Office of the President ran a budget of more than $114 million and a staff of more than sixteen hundred: 620 in the budget bureau alone and 325 in the White House proper (Smith 1988, 301).
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| 2. See Appendix 1 for further details of negotiations with the White House over the Bush PAS Survey.
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