viewing a political appointment as a ticket to the greater financial rewards available in the private sector" (ibid., 111).
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The hoary short-termer personnel system traditionally "creates what is basically an accidental collection of individuals with little past commitment to political leadership and few enduring stakes in government's own capabilities and performance" (Heclo 1977, 154). In contrast, the Reagan appointees were determined to change government and to do so as quickly as possible, given their limited tenure.
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| | Many clearly entered government because of their strong commitment to Reagan and to his political agenda. While some of our interviewees were uncomfortable with the label "ideologue," almost all expressed clear knowledge of, and support for, the Reagan agenda. The core of that political agenda was limited government, particularly in domestic agencies, and a strong defense posture. [They] lent support to the view of Newland (1983) that "(p)ublic administration under President Reagan . . . (was), to a significant extent, ideological political administration." (Ban and Ingraham 1990, 115-17)
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George Bush's appointees, as discussed below, were of a different stripe. While generally less radical and with a revolution to extend rather than create, they were more likely to value government and good management, per se.
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Risks Attendant to Appointments
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Presidents face not only limitations on their appointing authority, but risks in its use. One risk is that through an appointment, the president may actually lose, rather than gain, control over the executive branch. Because a president cannot manage his entire government from the White House, he must in large measure work through his cabinet, yet the truism holds that "the president and the cabinet are natural enemies," with competing power bases and avenues of support. "Presidents thus make their appointment decisions the way investors make their choices in the stock marketwith anticipation and trepidation, never being altogether certain whether they will be helped or hurt by the people they elevate to high government office" (Rourke 1991b, 124-25).
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Operating in a zero-sum power game, the more appointment power a president gives to his cabinet, the less loyalty he commands from his appointees' appointees. They are, understandably, most loyal to the person to whom they owe their position, in this case the cabinet secretary.
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