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Civil service reform in the United States

Civil service reform in the United States was a major issue in the late 19th century at the national level, and in the early 20th century at the state level. Proponents denounced the distribution of government offices—the "spoils"—by the winners of elections to their supporters as corrupt and inefficient. They demanded nonpartisan scientific methods and credential be used to select civil servants. The five important civil service reforms were the two Tenure of Office Acts of 1820 and 1867, Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act of 1883, the Hatch Acts (1939 and 1940) and the CSRA of 1978.[1] In addition, the Civil Service Act of 1888 signed by President Grover Cleveland drastically expanded the civil service system.[2]

Carl Schurz, founder of the Liberal Republican Party and prominent advocate of civil service reform.

Early aggressive demands for civil service reform, particularly stemming from Democratic arguments, were associated with white supremacy and opposition towards economic and social gains made by blacks through the spoils system which pro-civil rights Republican "Stalwarts" shrewdly utilized during the Reconstruction and Gilded Age eras.[3] Historian Eric Foner writes that at the time of the Reconstruction era, blacks recognized that the establishing of a civil service system would prevent "the whole colored population" from holding public office.[4]

Among contemporary criticisms of the United States civil service system, some argue that the provisions of the Pendleton Act allowing for arbitrary expansion of civil service protections through the usage of federal executive action result in a subsequently massive bureaucracy that cannot be held to account.[5]

Spoils system edit

In 1801 President Thomas Jefferson, alarmed that Federalists dominated the civil service and the army, identified the party affiliation of office holders and systematically appointed Democratic-Republicans. Andrew Jackson in 1829 began the systematic rotation of officeholders after four years, replacing them with his partisans in a controversial move. By the 1830s the "spoils system" meant the systematic replacement of officeholders every time the government changed party hands.[6]

Reform efforts edit

The first code of civil service reforms was designed to replace patronage appointees with nonpartisan employees qualified because of their skills.

Ulysses S. Grant edit

 
President Ulysses S. Grant.

President Ulysses S. Grant (1869–1877) spoke out in favor of civil service reform, and rejected demands in late 1872 by Pennsylvania senator Simon Cameron and governor John Hartranft to suspend the rules and make patronage appointments.[7]

Grant's Civil Service Commission reforms had limited success, as his cabinet implemented a merit system that increased the number of qualified candidates and relied less on congressional patronage.[8] Interior Secretary Columbus Delano, however, exempted his department from competitive examinations, and Congress refused to enact permanent Civil Service reform. Zachariah Chandler, who succeeded Delano, made sweeping reforms in the entire Interior Department; Grant ordered Chandler to fire all corrupt clerks in the Bureau of Indian Affairs.[9] Grant appointed reformers Edwards Pierrepont and Marshall Jewell as Attorney General and Postmaster General, respectively, who supported Bristow's investigations.[10] In 1875, Pierrepont cleaned up corruption among the United States Attorneys and Marshals in the South.[11]

Grant, who did not share the mindset of liberal reformers, faced opposition by the insurgent Liberal Republican Party in the 1872 United States presidential election in spite of his reform efforts within the federal government. The Liberal Republicans, led by Charles Sumner, B. Gratz Brown, and Carl Schurz, nominated Horace Greeley, who would lose the general election to Grant.[12]

The Pendleton Act edit

 
Senator George H. Pendleton of Ohio.

The Civil Service Reform Act (called "the Pendleton Act") is an 1883 federal law that created the United States Civil Service Commission.[13] It eventually placed most federal employees on the merit system and marked the end of the so-called "spoils system".[13] Drafted during the Chester A. Arthur administration, the Pendleton Act served as a response to President James Garfield's assassination by a disappointed office seeker.[13] The Act was passed into law in January 1883; it was sponsored by Democratic senator George H. Pendleton of Ohio. It was drafted by Dorman Bridgman Eaton, a leading reformer who became the first chairman of the U.S. Civil Service Commission. Its most famous commissioner was Theodore Roosevelt (1889–95).

The new law prohibited mandatory campaign contributions, or "assessments", which amounted to 50–75% of party financing in the Gilded Age. Second, the Pendleton Act required entrance exams for aspiring bureaucrats.[13] At first it covered very few jobs but there was a ratchet provision whereby outgoing presidents could lock in their own appointees by converting their jobs to civil service. Political reformers, typified by the Mugwumps demanded an end to the spoils system. After a series of party reversals at the presidential level (in 1884, 1888, 1892, 1896), the result was that most federal jobs were under civil service. One result was more expertise and less politics. An unintended result was the shift of the parties to reliance on funding from business, since they could no longer depend on patronage hopefuls.[13] Mark Hanna found a substitute revenue stream in 1896, by assessing corporations.[14]

Mugwumps edit

 
The Mugwumps were Republicans who refused to support Republican presidential candidate James G. Blaine in 1884.

Political patronage, also known as the "spoils system", was the issue that angered many reform-minded Republicans, leading them to reject Blaine's candidacy. In the spoils system, the winning candidate would dole out government positions to those who had supported his political party prior to the election. Although the Pendleton Act of 1883 made competency and merit the base qualifications for government positions, its effective implementation was slow. Political affiliation continued to be the basis for appointment to many positions.[15]

 
Cartoonist Thomas Nast of Harper's Weekly was a leading Mugwump strongly opposed to Blaine.

In the early 1880s, the issue of political patronage split the Republican Party down the middle for several consecutive sessions of Congress. The party was divided into two warring factions, each with creative names. The side that held the upper hand in numbers and popular support were the Half-Breeds, led by senator James G. Blaine of Maine since 1880. The Half-Breeds supported civil service reform, and often blocked legislation and political appointments put forth by their main congressional opponents, the Stalwarts, led by Roscoe Conkling of New York.

Ironically, in spite of Blaine's status as a convert into the pro-civil service reform "Half-Breeds," the Mugwumps rejected his candidacy primarily due to his corruption. Their ranks were informally joined by Vermont Republican George F. Edmunds, a staunch Half-Breed who never accepted Blaine as an honest convert and opposed the Maine senator's candidacy. During the campaign, Edmunds stated:[16]

It is my deliberate opinion that Senator Blaine acts as the attorney of Jay Gould. Whenever [Allen G. Thurman] and I have settled upon legislation to bring the Pacific Railroad to terms of equity with the government, up has jumped Mr. James G. Blaine musket in hand, from behind the breastworks of Jay Gould’s lobby to fire in our faces.

This division among Republicans may have contributed to the victory in 1884 of Grover Cleveland, the first president elected from the Democratic party since the Civil War. In the period from 1876 to 1892, presidential elections were closely contested at the national level, but the states themselves were mostly dominated by a single party, with Democrats prevailing in the South and the Republicans in the Northeast. Although the defection of the Mugwumps may have helped Cleveland win in New York, one of the few closely contested states, historians attribute Cleveland's victory nationwide to the rising power of urban immigrant voters.[17]

Progressive era edit

The 1883 law only applied to federal jobs: not to the state and local jobs that were the main basis for political machines. Ethical degeneration was halted by reform in civil service and municipal reform in the Progressive Era, which led to structural changes in administrative departments and changes in the way the government managed public affairs.[18]

Recent civil service reform efforts edit

George W. Bush administration efforts edit

The 2001 September 11 attacks gave George W. Bush the political support needed in order to launch civil service reforms in US agencies related to national security. At first these efforts primarily targeted the then-new Department of Homeland Security (DHS), but the Department of Defense (DOD) also received large reform efforts. According to Kellough, Nigro, and Brewer, such attempts included "restrictions on collective bargaining, such as the authority given to departmental secretaries (and, in the case of the DOD, other high-level officials as well) unilaterally to [repeal] negotiated agreements and the limitations imposed on employee rights in adverse actions." However, ultimately the efforts at civil service reform were undone. The DHS announced on 1 October, 2008 that it was abandoning the new civil service system and returning to the previous one.[19]

Barack Obama administration efforts edit

Throughout President Barack Obama's Administration, the United States Office of Personnel Management (OPM)'s "overarching focus has been to modernize the way OPM supports agencies, current and former federal employees, and their families so that the Federal Workforce better serves the American people."[20]

Donald Trump administration efforts edit

President Donald Trump took action on reforming the civil service by signing "a trio of executive orders that reform civil service rules by expediting termination for cause, revamping union contracts and limiting taxpayer-funded union work at agencies"[21] in May 2018. In October 2020, Trump signed another executive order transferring at least 100,000 government jobs from being classified as "competitive service" to "excepted service," a move deemed an undermining of the Pendleton Act.[by whom?][22]

Joe Biden administration efforts edit

In January 2021, President Joe Biden signed an executive order reversing the actions of his predecessor President Trump.[23]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Scott C. James, , British Journal of Political Science 36#1 (2006): 39–60. online]
  2. ^ December 5, 1888. President Grover Cleveland Expands the Coverage of the Civil Service Act, In a Letter to His Postmaster General. RAAB Collection. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  3. ^ Matthews, Dylan (July 20, 2016). Donald Trump and Chris Christie are reportedly planning to purge the civil service. Vox. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
  4. ^ Foner, Eric (1988). Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877, p. 507. New York: Harper & Row.
  5. ^ Stepman, Inez Feltscher (February 2, 2017). To 'drain the swamp,' Trump should look to states' civil service reform. The Hill. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  6. ^ Erik McKinley Eriksson, "The Federal Civil Service Under President Jackson", Mississippi Valley Historical Review 13.4 (1927): 517–40.
  7. ^ Kennedy, Robert C. (2001). "No Surrender". Harpweek.
  8. ^ Jean Edward Smith, Grant (2001) pp. 589–90.
  9. ^ John Y. Simon, "Ulysses S. Grant". in Henry Graff, ed., The Presidents: A Reference History (7th ed. 2002). pp. 245–60 p. 250.
  10. ^ Smith, Grant (2001) pp. 584–85.
  11. ^ William B. Hesseltine, Ulysses S. Grant: Politician (1935) p. 374
  12. ^ Liberal Republican Party. Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  13. ^ a b c d e Roark, James L.; Johnson, Michael P.; Furstenburg, Francois; Cline Cohen, Patricia; Hartmann, Susan M.; Stage, Sarah; Igo, Sarah E. (2020). "Chapter 18 The Gilded Age: 1865–1900". The American Promise: A History of the United States (Kindle). Vol. Combined Volume (Value Edition, 8th ed.). Boston, MA: Bedford/St. Martin's. Kindle Locations 13795–13835. ISBN 978-1319208929. OCLC 1096495503.
  14. ^ Ari Hoogenboom, "The Pendleton Act and the Civil Service", American Historical Review 64.2 (1959): 301–18.
  15. ^ Hoogenboom (1961)
  16. ^ Ward, Benjamin. The Downfall of Senator George F. Edmunds: The Election of 1884. Vermont History. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  17. ^ Mark Wahlgren Summers, Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion: The Making of a President, 1884 (2000)
  18. ^ Pamela S. Tolbert and Lynne G. Zucker. "Institutional sources of change in the formal structure of organizations: The diffusion of civil service reform, 1880–1935", Administrative Science Quarterly (1983): 22–39.
  19. ^ Kellough, J. Edward; Nigro, Lloyd G.; Brewer, Gene A. (2010). "Civil Service Reform Under George W. Bush: Ideology, Politics, and Public Personnel Administration". Review of Public Personnel Administration. SAGE Publications. 30 (4): 404–422. doi:10.1177/0734371X10381488. ISSN 0734-371X. OCLC 60688742. S2CID 153368460.
  20. ^ "U.S. Office of Personnel Management Cabinet Exit Memo | CHCOC". chcoc.gov. Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  21. ^ "Trump revamps civil service rules, makes it easier to fire bad federal employees". The Washington Times. Retrieved 2018-11-13.
  22. ^ Garrett, Laurie (October 25, 2020). How Trump could undermine Fauci and remake the US government. CNN. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  23. ^ January 22, 2021. Executive Order on Protecting the Federal Workforce. The White House. Retrieved March 3, 2022.

References edit

Bibliography edit

  • Fesler, James W. and Donald F. Kettl. The Politics of the Administrative Process, (2nd ed. 1996), textbook.
  • Hoogenboom, Ari. Outlawing the Spoils: A History of the Civil Service Reform Movement, 1865–1883 (1961)
  • Hoogenboom, Ari. "The Pendleton Act and the Civil Service Reform." American Historical Review 1959. 64: 301–18. in JSTOR.
  • Hoogenboom, Ari. "Thomas A. Jenckes and Civil Service Reform." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1961. 47: 636–58. in JSTOR
  • Huddleston, Mark W., and William W. Boyer. The Higher Civil Service in the United States: Quest for Reform (1996),
  • Ingraham, Patricia Wallace. The Foundation of Merit: Public Service in American Democracy. 1995.
  • Ingraham, Patricia W., and David H. Rosenbloom, eds. The Promise and Paradox of Civil Service Reform, (1992
  • Johnson, Ronald N., and Gary D. Libecap. The Federal Civil Service System and the Problem of Bureaucracy: The Economics and Politics of Institutional Change 1994
  • Moynihan, Donald P. "Protection Versus Flexibility: the Civil Service Reform Act, Competing Administrative Doctrines, and the Roots of Contemporary Public Management Debate." Journal of Policy History 2004 16(1): 1–33. ISSN 0898-0306 Fulltext: [ 1. Project Muse and Ebsco
  • Park, Soo-Young. "Who Is Our Master? Congressional Debates during Civil Service Reforms." PhD dissertation Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and State U. 2005. 218 pp. DAI 2006 67(2): 715-A. DA3208258
  • Roark, James L.; Johnson, Michael P.; Furstenburg, Francois; Cline Cohen, Patricia; Hartmann, Susan M.; Stage, Sarah; Igo, Sarah E. The American Promise: a History of the United States, Value Edition, Combined Volume. 8th edition. (Kindle Locations 13795-13835). Bedford/St. Martin's. Kindle Edition. Textbook.
  • Shafritz, Jay M. et al. Personnel Management in Government: Politics and Process (2001), textbook
  • Skowronek, Stephen. Building a New American State: The Expansion of National Administrative Capacity, 1877–1920 (1982).
  • Summers, Mark W. The Plundering Generation: Corruption and the Crisis of the Union, 1849–1861 (1987).
  • Van Riper, Paul P. History of the United States Civil Service (1958).
  • Weber J., "Leonard Dupee White and Public Administration", Journal of Management History, Volume 2, Number 2, February 1996, pp. 41–64
  • White, Leonard D. The Federalists: a Study in Administrative History, 1956.
  • White, Leonard D. The Jeffersonians: a Study in Administrative History (1952)
  • White, Leonard D. The Jacksonians: a Study in Administrative History online at ACLS e-books (1954)
  • White, Leonard D. The Republican Era, 1869–1901 a Study in Administrative History, 1958 online at ACLS e-books
  • White, Richard D., Jr. Roosevelt the Reformer: Theodore Roosevelt as Civil Service Commissioner, 1889–1895. (2003). 264 pp.

civil, service, reform, united, states, major, issue, late, 19th, century, national, level, early, 20th, century, state, level, proponents, denounced, distribution, government, offices, spoils, winners, elections, their, supporters, corrupt, inefficient, they,. Civil service reform in the United States was a major issue in the late 19th century at the national level and in the early 20th century at the state level Proponents denounced the distribution of government offices the spoils by the winners of elections to their supporters as corrupt and inefficient They demanded nonpartisan scientific methods and credential be used to select civil servants The five important civil service reforms were the two Tenure of Office Acts of 1820 and 1867 Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act of 1883 the Hatch Acts 1939 and 1940 and the CSRA of 1978 1 In addition the Civil Service Act of 1888 signed by President Grover Cleveland drastically expanded the civil service system 2 Carl Schurz founder of the Liberal Republican Party and prominent advocate of civil service reform Early aggressive demands for civil service reform particularly stemming from Democratic arguments were associated with white supremacy and opposition towards economic and social gains made by blacks through the spoils system which pro civil rights Republican Stalwarts shrewdly utilized during the Reconstruction and Gilded Age eras 3 Historian Eric Foner writes that at the time of the Reconstruction era blacks recognized that the establishing of a civil service system would prevent the whole colored population from holding public office 4 Among contemporary criticisms of the United States civil service system some argue that the provisions of the Pendleton Act allowing for arbitrary expansion of civil service protections through the usage of federal executive action result in a subsequently massive bureaucracy that cannot be held to account 5 Contents 1 Spoils system 2 Reform efforts 2 1 Ulysses S Grant 2 2 The Pendleton Act 2 3 Mugwumps 2 4 Progressive era 2 5 Recent civil service reform efforts 2 5 1 George W Bush administration efforts 2 5 2 Barack Obama administration efforts 2 5 3 Donald Trump administration efforts 2 5 4 Joe Biden administration efforts 3 Notes 4 References 5 BibliographySpoils system editIn 1801 President Thomas Jefferson alarmed that Federalists dominated the civil service and the army identified the party affiliation of office holders and systematically appointed Democratic Republicans Andrew Jackson in 1829 began the systematic rotation of officeholders after four years replacing them with his partisans in a controversial move By the 1830s the spoils system meant the systematic replacement of officeholders every time the government changed party hands 6 Reform efforts editThe first code of civil service reforms was designed to replace patronage appointees with nonpartisan employees qualified because of their skills Ulysses S Grant edit nbsp President Ulysses S Grant Further information Scandals of the Ulysses S Grant administration and Reforms of the Ulysses S Grant administration President Ulysses S Grant 1869 1877 spoke out in favor of civil service reform and rejected demands in late 1872 by Pennsylvania senator Simon Cameron and governor John Hartranft to suspend the rules and make patronage appointments 7 Grant s Civil Service Commission reforms had limited success as his cabinet implemented a merit system that increased the number of qualified candidates and relied less on congressional patronage 8 Interior Secretary Columbus Delano however exempted his department from competitive examinations and Congress refused to enact permanent Civil Service reform Zachariah Chandler who succeeded Delano made sweeping reforms in the entire Interior Department Grant ordered Chandler to fire all corrupt clerks in the Bureau of Indian Affairs 9 Grant appointed reformers Edwards Pierrepont and Marshall Jewell as Attorney General and Postmaster General respectively who supported Bristow s investigations 10 In 1875 Pierrepont cleaned up corruption among the United States Attorneys and Marshals in the South 11 Grant who did not share the mindset of liberal reformers faced opposition by the insurgent Liberal Republican Party in the 1872 United States presidential election in spite of his reform efforts within the federal government The Liberal Republicans led by Charles Sumner B Gratz Brown and Carl Schurz nominated Horace Greeley who would lose the general election to Grant 12 The Pendleton Act edit nbsp Senator George H Pendleton of Ohio Main article Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act The Civil Service Reform Act called the Pendleton Act is an 1883 federal law that created the United States Civil Service Commission 13 It eventually placed most federal employees on the merit system and marked the end of the so called spoils system 13 Drafted during the Chester A Arthur administration the Pendleton Act served as a response to President James Garfield s assassination by a disappointed office seeker 13 The Act was passed into law in January 1883 it was sponsored by Democratic senator George H Pendleton of Ohio It was drafted by Dorman Bridgman Eaton a leading reformer who became the first chairman of the U S Civil Service Commission Its most famous commissioner was Theodore Roosevelt 1889 95 The new law prohibited mandatory campaign contributions or assessments which amounted to 50 75 of party financing in the Gilded Age Second the Pendleton Act required entrance exams for aspiring bureaucrats 13 At first it covered very few jobs but there was a ratchet provision whereby outgoing presidents could lock in their own appointees by converting their jobs to civil service Political reformers typified by the Mugwumps demanded an end to the spoils system After a series of party reversals at the presidential level in 1884 1888 1892 1896 the result was that most federal jobs were under civil service One result was more expertise and less politics An unintended result was the shift of the parties to reliance on funding from business since they could no longer depend on patronage hopefuls 13 Mark Hanna found a substitute revenue stream in 1896 by assessing corporations 14 Mugwumps edit nbsp The Mugwumps were Republicans who refused to support Republican presidential candidate James G Blaine in 1884 Political patronage also known as the spoils system was the issue that angered many reform minded Republicans leading them to reject Blaine s candidacy In the spoils system the winning candidate would dole out government positions to those who had supported his political party prior to the election Although the Pendleton Act of 1883 made competency and merit the base qualifications for government positions its effective implementation was slow Political affiliation continued to be the basis for appointment to many positions 15 nbsp Cartoonist Thomas Nast of Harper s Weekly was a leading Mugwump strongly opposed to Blaine In the early 1880s the issue of political patronage split the Republican Party down the middle for several consecutive sessions of Congress The party was divided into two warring factions each with creative names The side that held the upper hand in numbers and popular support were the Half Breeds led by senator James G Blaine of Maine since 1880 The Half Breeds supported civil service reform and often blocked legislation and political appointments put forth by their main congressional opponents the Stalwarts led by Roscoe Conkling of New York Ironically in spite of Blaine s status as a convert into the pro civil service reform Half Breeds the Mugwumps rejected his candidacy primarily due to his corruption Their ranks were informally joined by Vermont Republican George F Edmunds a staunch Half Breed who never accepted Blaine as an honest convert and opposed the Maine senator s candidacy During the campaign Edmunds stated 16 It is my deliberate opinion that Senator Blaine acts as the attorney of Jay Gould Whenever Allen G Thurman and I have settled upon legislation to bring the Pacific Railroad to terms of equity with the government up has jumped Mr James G Blaine musket in hand from behind the breastworks of Jay Gould s lobby to fire in our faces This division among Republicans may have contributed to the victory in 1884 of Grover Cleveland the first president elected from the Democratic party since the Civil War In the period from 1876 to 1892 presidential elections were closely contested at the national level but the states themselves were mostly dominated by a single party with Democrats prevailing in the South and the Republicans in the Northeast Although the defection of the Mugwumps may have helped Cleveland win in New York one of the few closely contested states historians attribute Cleveland s victory nationwide to the rising power of urban immigrant voters 17 Progressive era edit The 1883 law only applied to federal jobs not to the state and local jobs that were the main basis for political machines Ethical degeneration was halted by reform in civil service and municipal reform in the Progressive Era which led to structural changes in administrative departments and changes in the way the government managed public affairs 18 Recent civil service reform efforts edit George W Bush administration efforts edit The 2001 September 11 attacks gave George W Bush the political support needed in order to launch civil service reforms in US agencies related to national security At first these efforts primarily targeted the then new Department of Homeland Security DHS but the Department of Defense DOD also received large reform efforts According to Kellough Nigro and Brewer such attempts included restrictions on collective bargaining such as the authority given to departmental secretaries and in the case of the DOD other high level officials as well unilaterally to repeal negotiated agreements and the limitations imposed on employee rights in adverse actions However ultimately the efforts at civil service reform were undone The DHS announced on 1 October 2008 that it was abandoning the new civil service system and returning to the previous one 19 Barack Obama administration efforts edit Throughout President Barack Obama s Administration the United States Office of Personnel Management OPM s overarching focus has been to modernize the way OPM supports agencies current and former federal employees and their families so that the Federal Workforce better serves the American people 20 Donald Trump administration efforts edit President Donald Trump took action on reforming the civil service by signing a trio of executive orders that reform civil service rules by expediting termination for cause revamping union contracts and limiting taxpayer funded union work at agencies 21 in May 2018 In October 2020 Trump signed another executive order transferring at least 100 000 government jobs from being classified as competitive service to excepted service a move deemed an undermining of the Pendleton Act by whom 22 Joe Biden administration efforts edit In January 2021 President Joe Biden signed an executive order reversing the actions of his predecessor President Trump 23 Notes edit Scott C James Patronage Regimes and American Party Development from The Age of Jackson to the Progressive Era British Journal of Political Science 36 1 2006 39 60 online December 5 1888 President Grover Cleveland Expands the Coverage of the Civil Service Act In a Letter to His Postmaster General RAAB Collection Retrieved March 3 2022 Matthews Dylan July 20 2016 Donald Trump and Chris Christie are reportedly planning to purge the civil service Vox Retrieved January 27 2022 Foner Eric 1988 Reconstruction America s Unfinished Revolution 1863 1877 p 507 New York Harper amp Row Stepman Inez Feltscher February 2 2017 To drain the swamp Trump should look to states civil service reform The Hill Retrieved March 3 2022 Erik McKinley Eriksson The Federal Civil Service Under President Jackson Mississippi Valley Historical Review 13 4 1927 517 40 Kennedy Robert C 2001 No Surrender Harpweek Jean Edward Smith Grant 2001 pp 589 90 John Y Simon Ulysses S Grant in Henry Graff ed The Presidents A Reference History 7th ed 2002 pp 245 60 p 250 Smith Grant 2001 pp 584 85 William B Hesseltine Ulysses S Grant Politician 1935 p 374 Liberal Republican Party Encyclopedia com Retrieved March 3 2022 a b c d e Roark James L Johnson Michael P Furstenburg Francois Cline Cohen Patricia Hartmann Susan M Stage Sarah Igo Sarah E 2020 Chapter 18 The Gilded Age 1865 1900 The American Promise A History of the United States Kindle Vol Combined Volume Value Edition 8th ed Boston MA Bedford St Martin s Kindle Locations 13795 13835 ISBN 978 1319208929 OCLC 1096495503 Ari Hoogenboom The Pendleton Act and the Civil Service American Historical Review 64 2 1959 301 18 Hoogenboom 1961 Ward Benjamin The Downfall of Senator George F Edmunds The Election of 1884 Vermont History Retrieved March 3 2022 Mark Wahlgren Summers Rum Romanism and Rebellion The Making of a President 1884 2000 Pamela S Tolbert and Lynne G Zucker Institutional sources of change in the formal structure of organizations The diffusion of civil service reform 1880 1935 Administrative Science Quarterly 1983 22 39 Kellough J Edward Nigro Lloyd G Brewer Gene A 2010 Civil Service Reform Under George W Bush Ideology Politics and Public Personnel Administration Review of Public Personnel Administration SAGE Publications 30 4 404 422 doi 10 1177 0734371X10381488 ISSN 0734 371X OCLC 60688742 S2CID 153368460 U S Office of Personnel Management Cabinet Exit Memo CHCOC chcoc gov Retrieved 2018 11 14 Trump revamps civil service rules makes it easier to fire bad federal employees The Washington Times Retrieved 2018 11 13 Garrett Laurie October 25 2020 How Trump could undermine Fauci and remake the US government CNN Retrieved March 3 2022 January 22 2021 Executive Order on Protecting the Federal Workforce The White House Retrieved March 3 2022 References editThis article incorporates material from the Citizendium article Civil service reform in the United States which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License but not under the GFDL Bibliography editFesler James W and Donald F Kettl The Politics of the Administrative Process 2nd ed 1996 textbook Hoogenboom Ari Outlawing the Spoils A History of the Civil Service Reform Movement 1865 1883 1961 Hoogenboom Ari The Pendleton Act and the Civil Service Reform American Historical Review 1959 64 301 18 in JSTOR Hoogenboom Ari Thomas A Jenckes and Civil Service Reform Mississippi Valley Historical Review 1961 47 636 58 in JSTOR Huddleston Mark W and William W Boyer The Higher Civil Service in the United States Quest for Reform 1996 Ingraham Patricia Wallace The Foundation of Merit Public Service in American Democracy 1995 Ingraham Patricia W and David H Rosenbloom eds The Promise and Paradox of Civil Service Reform 1992 Johnson Ronald N and Gary D Libecap The Federal Civil Service System and the Problem of Bureaucracy The Economics and Politics of Institutional Change 1994 Moynihan Donald P Protection Versus Flexibility the Civil Service Reform Act Competing Administrative Doctrines and the Roots of Contemporary Public Management Debate Journal of Policy History 2004 16 1 1 33 ISSN 0898 0306 Fulltext 1 Project Muse and Ebsco Park Soo Young Who Is Our Master Congressional Debates during Civil Service Reforms PhD dissertation Virginia Polytechnic Inst and State U 2005 218 pp DAI 2006 67 2 715 A DA3208258 Roark James L Johnson Michael P Furstenburg Francois Cline Cohen Patricia Hartmann Susan M Stage Sarah Igo Sarah E The American Promise a History of the United States Value Edition Combined Volume 8th edition Kindle Locations 13795 13835 Bedford St Martin s Kindle Edition Textbook Shafritz Jay M et al Personnel Management in Government Politics and Process 2001 textbook Skowronek Stephen Building a New American State The Expansion of National Administrative Capacity 1877 1920 1982 Summers Mark W The Plundering Generation Corruption and the Crisis of the Union 1849 1861 1987 Van Riper Paul P History of the United States Civil Service 1958 Weber J Leonard Dupee White and Public Administration Journal of Management History Volume 2 Number 2 February 1996 pp 41 64 White Leonard D The Federalists a Study in Administrative History 1956 White Leonard D The Jeffersonians a Study in Administrative History 1952 White Leonard D The Jacksonians a Study in Administrative History online at ACLS e books 1954 White Leonard D The Republican Era 1869 1901 a Study in Administrative History 1958 online at ACLS e books White Richard D Jr Roosevelt the Reformer Theodore Roosevelt as Civil Service Commissioner 1889 1895 2003 264 pp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Civil service reform in the United States amp oldid 1163082740, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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