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The administrative presidency, unilateral power, and the unitary executive theory.

Publication: Presidential Studies Quarterly
Publication Date: 01-MAR-09
Format: Online
Delivery: Immediate Online Access
Full Article Title: The administrative presidency, unilateral power, and the unitary executive theory.(examination of the president's influence over the bureaucracy)(Essay)

Article Excerpt
The essays in this symposium examine the administrative presidency strategy. That leadership strategy originally was initiated by the Richard M. Nixon administration as an attempt to accomplish administratively what it could not do legislatively (Nathan 1983; Waterman 1989). While the idea of the administrative presidency remains politically controversial, it is mostly based on solid constitutional principles. The strongest constitutional foundation is the president's ability to appoint loyalists to positions throughout the bureaucracy. While the debate over whether a president should promote loyalty rather than competence as the main criterion for making appointments is certainly controversial, there is a sound constitutional basis for this practice, even when presidents use their recess power to make late-term appointments.

Presidents have been on solid legal ground as well in removing officials who were judged to be insufficiently loyal to them or to their policies. As long as these officials held appointments that ultimately were responsible to the president and served at the president's pleasure, they could be legally subject to removal at any time. Abuses of power occurred, however, when the Nixon administration attempted to remove civil servants or to deploy them to remote locations. Later, though, Ronald Reagan was able to use newly emerging powers emanating from Jimmy Carter-era civil service reform legislation to transfer career employees to less amenable locations, which forced them to resign if they wished not to relocate. These steps, taken during the Reagan administration, while politically controversial, were nonetheless legal, and the results often advanced the policy interests of the president. While controversial and maybe even undesirable, these personnel actions were legally permissible and fell within the ambit of executive authority delegated by the Civil Service Reform Act.

A different idea, however, arose in the form of the unitary executive theory. It posits that the president has sole responsibility for the control and maintenance of the executive branch, further extending the debate on the scope of the president's removal power (Calabresi and Yoo 1997, 2003; Fitts 1996). Proponents of the theory have sought to...



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