Title: Presidential Commissions: The Evolution of the Crisis Commission
1Presidential Commissions The Evolution of the
Crisis Commission
- Jessica R. Smith
- smitjes_at_auburn.edu
- ENGL 7030
2Overview
- Definition of Presidential Advisory Commission
- History of Federal Advisory Commissions
- Evolution of Crisis Commissions
- Milestone Crisis Commissions
- Roberts Commission Pearl Harbor (1942)
- Warren Commission Kennedy Assassination (1964)
- Scranton Commission Campus Unrest (1970)
- Rogers Commission Challenger (1986)
- 9/11 Commission (2004)
3Works Cited
- DeMott, Benjamin. Whitewash as Public Service
How The 9/11 Commission Report Defrauds the
Nation. Harper's Magazine Oct. 2004 35-45. - Epstein, Edward Jay. Inquest The Warren
Commission and the Establishment of Truth.
Introduction by Richard H. Rovere. New York
Viking Press, 1966. - Smith, Stephanie. Federal Advisory Committees A
Primer. Hauppauge, NY Novinka Books, 2002. - Tutchings, Terrence R. Rhetoric and Reality
Presidential Commissions and the Making of Public
Policy. Boulder, Colorado Westview Press, 1979. - Wolanin, Thomas R. Presidential Advisory
Commissions Truman to Nixon. Madison University
of Wisconsin Press, 1975.
4Basics
- Advisory commissions can be established by
Congress, agency heads, or the president. - Their function is to handle matters which fall
outside the purview of pre-existing government
bodies. - There are on average 1,000 advisory committees
operating government-wide at any given time. - Most are routine a special subset deals with
national crises.
5Definition of Presidential Advisory Commission
- (1) A corporate group created by a public act,
(2) which is advisory to the president, (3) all
members of which are appointed directly by the
president, (4) which is ad hoc, (5) at least one
member of which is public, and (6) whose report
is public. (Wolanin 7)
6History
- George Washington is usually credited with
initiating the tradition of the president seeking
outside advice when he appointed an ad hoc group
of commissioners in 1794 to deal with the Whiskey
Rebellion - (Smith 2)
7History
- It was not until the 20th century that the
Chief Executive, Congress, and agency heads began
to make extensive use of such panels to render
independent advice and recommendations. - (Smith 2)
8(No Transcript)
9FACA
- Congress enacted the Federal Advisory Committee
Act (FACA) in 1972 - Established formal requirements for the
establishment, management, and oversight of
advisory commissions - Required that the advice provided by advisory
committees be objective and accessible to the
public (Smith 3) - Legitimized the use of commissions
10Routine vs. Public Commissions
- Certain of these commissions stand out from the
others because they are public commissions in
many ways. - (Tutchings 11)
- Created by Executive Order
- Prominent commissioners
- Deal with national crises
11Why Appoint a Crisis Commission?
- Crisis commissions have as their primary
purpose to reassure the public that the president
and the government are concerned and are acting.
They are generally expected by the president to
be more useful for their immediate symbolic value
than for their ultimate findings and
recommendations. - (Wolanin 21)
12Conflicting Demands
- Investigate the crisis
- Reassure the public
13Roberts Commission Pearl Harbor (1942)
14Roberts Commission Pearl Harbor (1942)
- Differences language and commissioners
- Appointed to determine if there was any
dereliction of duty - Published their report 47 days after the attack
- Condemned Kimmel and Short
- Standleys objections
- Kimmel and Short later exonerated
15Warren Commission Kennedy Assassination (1964)
16Warren Commission Kennedy Assassination (1964)
- If the explicit purpose of the Commission was
to ascertain and expose facts, the implicit
purpose was to protect national interest by
dispelling rumors (Epstein 33). - Time constraints ten months
- Celebrity commissioners too busy?
- Language
17Scranton Commission Campus Unrest (1970)
18Scranton Commission Campus Unrest (1970)
- Response to public demands to investigate killing
of 4 students at Kent State and 2 at Jackson
State - 4 members under age of 40 first ever
commissioner under 30, 22-year-old Joseph Rhodes
- 3 months - instructed to complete report before
fall quarter - Held open public hearings in order to gain public
support and credibility
19Rogers Commission Challenger Disaster (1986)
20Rogers Commission Challenger Disaster (1986)
- By this time, a presidential commission is the
standard response to a national crisis - Public exposure is also now a given for crisis
commissions - Celebrity commissioners
- Conflicting demands to investigate the cause and
promote national healing and a quick return to
space flight - 120-day time limit
- Communication failure rather than blame
219/11 Commission (2004)
229/11 Commission (2004)
- Appointed over a year after 9/11/ and published
report almost 2 years after appointment - Response to great public outcry and demands from
victims families - Narrative, conversational tone
- Terror of bias (DeMott 36)
23Conclusions
- Presidential commissions now expected after a
national crisis - Celebrity commissioners are now common
- Crisis commission operate in the public eye
- They are expected to both investigate and provide
closure - Accessible language
- Trend toward general findings rather than sharp
criticism