By Tom Shoop | Tuesday, March 20, 2007 | 08:18 AM
Which 2008 presidential candidate would be most likely to put federal management issues on the agenda and push for a bureaucratic overhaul? Maybe one who's not officially in the race yet: In a piece about former Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., who headed the then-Governmental Affairs Committee during his tenure on the Hill, John Fund of the Wall Street Journal's Opinion Journal, writes that "the federal government's inability to function effectively would likely be a major theme" in a Thompson campaign. "Audits have shown we've lost control of the waste and mismanagement in our most important agencies," Thompson says. "It's getting so bad it's affecting our national security." And that's not all:
The next president, according to Mr. Thompson, needs to exercise strong leadership "and get down in the weeds and fix a civil-service system that makes it too hard to hire good employees and too hard to fire bad ones." He doesn't offer specifics on what to do, but notes the "insanity" of the new Congress pushing for the unionization of homeland security employees only five years after it rejected the notion in the wake of 9/11. "Should we tie ourselves up in bureaucratic knots with the challenges we may have to face?" he asks in wonderment.
Lots of presidential candidates run against the bureaucracy, but it's not every election cycle that one opens his campaign by getting down into the weeds of agency audits and civil service reform. Of course, Thompson's not officially a candidate yet. He's only said he's "looking at" running. (Hat tip: Kausfiles.)
Comments
Maybe Thompson should also remember that more than half of the "Federal" employees now are contractors & maybe that is part of the problem. It is from what I see. Some agency programs have contractors running them from front to back, from authorization thru compliance. Who is watching that?
Rita | Wednesday, March 21, 2007 | 10:33 AMJust what we need. Another Presidential candidate blasting away at all us lazy civil servants eager to compromise national security by exercising collective bargaining rights and willing to subject our own tax dollars to massive fraud and abuse.
When will we get leaders who are willing to recognize the vast, vast majority of us who do our jobs well, and not dismiss us as mere bureaucrats, a necessary evil for the orderly functioning of government.
wally | Wednesday, March 21, 2007 | 09:46 AMHe's run Law & Order into the ground. Do we want him to do the same to the Federal Government?
Sean O | Wednesday, March 21, 2007 | 09:44 AMABOUT THIS BLOG
Executive Editor Tom Shoop takes a look at news and events affecting the federal bureaucracy, from the perspective of a longtime observer of government.
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