Title: Government 101
1Government 101
- Overview
- Winter 2004
- Gail Johnson
2Foundations of the U.S. Government
3Declaration of Independence
- Vision statement
- Reflects thinking of that time
- Exclusionary
- Still a work in progress
4What is Government?
- Government is the political direction or control
exercised over the actions of citizens form or
system of rule. - Democracy government by the people power is
vested in the people.
5Role of Government
- Make Policy
- Laws
- Programs
- Regulations
- Taxes
- Implement Policy
- Directly federal agencies
- Through states and local governments
- Through 3rd parties
6Functions of Government
- Allocative function
- how budget resources are allocated to provide a
mix of goods and services - Distributive function
- redistribution of income and wealth in a way that
is deemed fair - Stabilization function
- economic/budget policy to keep the economy stable
7Enduring Issues
- Role of government?
- Size of government?
- More business-like?
- Competing values
- Role of public administrators
- Role of citizens
8 Enduring Issues Competing Values
- Economy
- Efficiency
- Effectiveness
- Equity
- Accountability
- Fairness
- Representativeness
- Justice
- Openness
- Due Process
- Public Interest
- Individual Rights
9In the Beginning. The Articles of Confederation
- A firm league of friendship
- Each state retains its sovereignty, freedom and
independence - Each state could create its own money, rules of
commerce (tariffs, etc.). - Unicameral representative Congress
- No executive, no independent judiciary, no upper
chamber of the legislature - No power to tax at national level
10Ten Year Later..need for change
- Treasury is empty Debts cannot be paid
- Unmet expectations equality and political
participation - Threat of a social revolution
- Competition between the statesduties to pay at
every state border - Lack of quorum in congress
- Conflict and chaos
11What Went Wrong?
- Fear Fear of a strong central government led
them to create a confederacy with no executive,
no money, no power to raise money. - Power to the states Narrow state
self-interestloyalty to the state, not nation.
12Bloodless coup detat
- Constitutional Convention, 1787 in Philadelphia
- Met behind locked doors.
- Consensus a more effective central government
was needed. But what powers, form or how
representation should be determined were up for
grabs.
13Constitution Refined Vision
- Preamble
- Specifies the roles and powers of each branch
- Short, guiding principles
- Separation of Powers
- Federalism
- Bill of Rights
- A work in progress
14Jefferson
- The example of changing a constitution, by
assembling the wise men of the State, instead of
assembling armies, will be worth as much to the
works as the former examples we have given them.
The Constitutionis unquestionably the wisest
ever yet presented to men.
15Bill of Rights
16James Madison
- "If men were angels, no government would be
necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither
external or internal controls on government would
be necessary. In framing a government which is
to be administered by men over men, the great
difficulty lies in this You must first enable
the government to control the governed and in
the next place oblige it to control itself." (51)
17Madisons Dream
- Diffused Power
- Love/Fear View of Power
- Mistrust of concentrated power
- Competing Power Rather than Hierarchical Power
- Competing rather than Collaborative Power
18Madison Mischief of Factions
- There are two methods of curing the mischief of
faction the one, by destroying the
liberty....the other, by giving every citizen the
same opinions.... (p.78) - Control the Effects of Faction
- Extend the spheres so permanent majorities cannot
be formed
19Madison
- It was intended that the legislature would be the
source of policy making, as the more deliberative
body. He believed that "promptitude of decisions
is oftener an evil than a benefit.
20Presidential Leadership
- Hamilton federal govt. revolving around the
president. Eg. FDR - Madison a prudent, less active govt, balanced
between legislative and executive powers.
Limited govt, anti-majority. - Jefferson majority rule, strong presidential
leadership, more egalitarian, a unified political
system
21Separation of powers The Presidency
- National Constituency
- Bully-pulpit
- Proposes budget
- Proposes Legislation
- Commander in chief
- Veto power
- Clears agency budgets, legislative proposals,
testimony - Office of Management and Budget
22The Presidency
- The doctrine of the separation of powers was
adopted by the Convention of 1787, not to promote
efficiency but to preclude the exercise of
arbitrary power. The purpose was, not to avoid
friction, but, by means of the inevitable
friction incident to distribution of the
governmental powers among three departments, to
save the people from autocracy. - L. Brandies
23The Presidency
- Under the doctrine of separation of powers, the
manner in which the president personally
exercises his assigned executive powers is not
subject to questioning by another branch of
government. - R. Nixon
24President
- How to we judge success?
- Legislation passed?
- Effective administration?
25Cabinet
- Power is delegated from President
- Serves at the pleasure of President
- Appointed by President with Senate confirmation
- Answerable to Congress
26Congress Separation of Powers
- House proposes budget
- Senate has to agree but cant propose House
more rowdy, shorter terms, more responsive to
voters - Senate more deliberative, longer terms, bigger
picture - Political payoff casework, bills passed in
constituents interest
27Congress
- Does work in committees.
- Authorizing Legislation and Appropriating Money
different committees - Multiple Committees for same agencies
- FEMA 23 committees
- EPA 18 committees
- What are the benefits and costs of Congressional
fragmentation?
28Judiciary Separation of Powers
- Judiciary
- Power is judicial review
- Interprets the law but has to wait for a case to
come to them - Cant take initiative
- Supreme Court
- To be removed from politics, justices serve for
life - The can also tell administrators what to do
29The Federal Agencies
- Institutional memory
- Permanent staff
- Rule-making and order-making authority
- Clientele support
- Medium for registering the views of the public
- Note they do not make laws and they do not make
the budgets!
30The Bureaucracy
- For public administrators
- Whom do we serve and to what end?
- Richard Box
31Enduring Issue Role of the Citizen
- Roles
- vote
- government employee
- civic involvement
- political action
- interest groups
-
32Enduring Issue Role of the Citizen
- Various, competing roles
- Citizens
- Owners
- Customers
- Clients
- Taxpayers
- WIIFM vs. Good of the Society
33Citizens
- For in a democracy, every citizen, regardless of
his interest in politics holds office every
one of us is in a position of responsibility
and, in the final analysis, the kind of
government we get depends upon how we fulfill
those responsibilities. We, the people, are the
boss, and will get the kind of political
leadership, be it good or bad, that we demand and
deserve. - J.F. Kennedy, Profiles in courage, pp 257-8 see
also p. 256.
34Citizens
- What does it mean to be a citizen?
- What is our responsibility?
- Why have many citizens disengaged?
- What can be done to re-engage citizens?
- Who will take the lead in re-engaging citizen?
- What are willing to do?
35Interest Groups
- Information
- Resources
- Votes
- Access
36The Iron Triangle
Agency
Congressional Committee
Interest Group
37Political Parties
- Funds
- Support
- Information
38Politicians POTS?
- Roberts Politicians are feeding this
anti-government sentiment.Too many politicians
believe that their role is to stand for
re-election rather than to stand for something. - We need to replace sound bites with sound
policy.
39Views of the role of politicians
- JFK p. xv, pp 16-17
- Kunin, 226-267
40Media the 4th estate
- Raise issues
- Watchdog
- Embarrass public officials
- Is the media doing its job?
- Can you have accountability without an
independent media?
41Federalism
- A system in which the powers of government are
divided among one authority that governs the
whole nation and several that govern its
political subdivision. The U.S. Constitution
delegates powers to the national government, with
the implication that those not mentioned are
reserved to the states. --William Johnson
42Federalism Different Levels of Government
- Federal Defense, Money, Postal, Space,
Veteran's Services, Natural Resources,
Retirement, Safety Net - State higher education, welfare, roads,
corrections, inspections, liquor control - Local (83,000 local governments) schools,
roads, police and fire, utilities, public
transportation, parks, sanitation, libraries.
43Fragmentation Enduring Feature of American
Government
- One Nation divided power
- 50 States
- 82,000 Local governments
- 30,000 counties
- 19,000 municipalities
- 18,000 townships
- 15,000 school districts
- 33,000 special distrcits
44Raising Revenue
- Federal Government
- Income Tax
- progressive
- ability to pay
- State Government
- Sales Tax
- regressive
- Income Tax
45Raising Revenue
- Local Government
- Property Tax
- regressive
46Role of Each Level?
- What are the appropriate roles and
responsibilities of each level? - Who shall raise what amount of money by what
methods and from which citizens? - Who shall spend how much for whose benefit and
for what results?
47Paradigms
- Traditional federalists
- Wilson Federal government is more efficient
but state and local governments are the bulwarks
of democracy. - National Federalists
- Their view is that we have become one nation.
- Pragmatic Federalists
- They are concerned with whether the present
system works or not concerned with the overloads.
48Federalism and Government by Proxy
- Partnerships
- Other federal agencies
- Eg. FBI, CIA, NSA communications breakdown?
- With state and local agencies
- Roads, welfare, medicaid, medicare
- With other governments
- treaties
- With nonprofits
- Faith-based grantees?
49Who Should Do What and Why?
- Government?
- What level?
- Policy?
- Pay?
- Administer?
- Why?
- Protection of Wetlands
- Food safety
- Higher Education
- Libraries
- Aids Prevention
50Who Should Do What and Why?
- Government?
- What level?
- Policy?
- Pay?
- Administer?
- Why?
- Trash collection
- Product Safety
- Prisons
- Headstart
- Parks
- Commuter railways
51Public Policy
- A decision to take action to remedy a public
problem - Often just an answer rather than the answer.
- An evolving process.
52Public Good Vs. Private Good
- Public value to larger society
- Cant be divided
- Non-exclusive
- Private accrues to the individual
- Can be divided
- Exclusive
53Who Makes Policy
- Pluralism group interaction, bargaining
- assumes all groups are represented
- Power Elite
- The pluralist choir sings with a distinctly
upper class bias. - Public Choice
- market will make choices
- Bureaucratic
- Expertise, Culture
54Rational Choice
- Most efficient decisions are made where
individuals who pay and benefit from public
programs are allowed market-type choice - Market forces can be used to attain greater
efficiency and effectiveness.
55Limits of the Market
- Can those that benefit really pay?
- Can we determine individual use?
- Can we determine and assign costs to all that
benefit? - Supply and demand imperfect theory
56Defining Power
- "Power is the medium through which conflicts of
interest are ultimately resolved. Power
influences who gets what, when, and how."
Morgan - Power involves an ability to get another person
to do something that he or she would not
otherwise have done." Dahl - "Power might be defined as simply the ability to
make things happen, to be a causal agent, to
initiate change. " Follett
57Power Over The dominator model
- Power is scarce and limited
- Giving orders or persuade through manipulation or
coercion - Punish non-compliance
- Negative beliefs about people
- Rooted in fear
58 Power WithThe Collaborative Model
- Power increases when shared
- Decision are determined by the situation
- Participatory problem-solving
- Positive beliefs about people
- Rooted in trust
59Conflict Represents Diversity
- What people often mean by getting rid of
conflict is getting rid of diversity, and it is
of utmost importance that these should ntot be
considered the same.We must face life as it is
and understand that diversity is its most
essential feature.Fear of difference is dread of
life itself. Follett
60Handling Conflict
- Domination a victory of one side over the other
- Compromise each side gives up a little in order
to have peace but compromise is unstable,
conflict remerges. - Integration. A solution in which both sides get
what they want without sacrificing anything they
value.
61Ways to handle conflict
- Avoidance--denial moose on the table
- Compromise deals, temporary
- Competition win/lose
- Accommodation giving way, submission
- Collaboration win/win, integrative
62Achieving Integration
- Put cards on the table
- Uncover the conflict
- Clarify the issue, consider the symbols
- Break into parts, smaller questions and issues.
63Obstacles to Integration
- Lack of intelligence or inventiveness
- Unwilling to take responsibility
- Enjoy domination or fight addiction
- Language of war
- Manipulations
- Lack of training/skill in the art of cooperative
thinking and action. Follett.
64Sources of Power
- Authority
- Expertise
- Control of Resources
- Control of Process
- Control of decision processes
- Information
- Personal
- Associational
- Coercive
65Exercise
- What are your sources of power?
66How bills become law