登陆注册
19500500000042

第42章 THE EXPERT AT LAST(1)

The administrative weakness of a democracy, namely, the tendency towards a government by job-hunters, was disclosed even in the early days of the United States, when the official machinery was simple and the number of offices few.Washington at once foresaw both the difficulties and the duties that the appointing power imposed.Soon after his inauguration he wrote to Rutledge: "Ianticipate that one of the most difficult and delicate parts of the duty of any office will be that which relates to nominations for appointments." And he was most scrupulous and painstaking in his appointments.Fitness for duty was paramount with him, though he recognized geographical necessity and distributed the offices with that precision which characterized all his acts.

John Adams made very few appointments.After his term had expired, he wrote: "Washington appointed a multitude of Democrats and Jacobins of the deepest die.I have been more cautious in this respect."The test of partizan loyalty, however, was not applied generally until after the election of Jefferson.The ludicrous apprehensions of the Federalists as to what would follow upon his election were not allayed by his declared intentions."I have given," he wrote to Monroe, "and will give only to Republicans under existing circumstances." Jefferson was too good a politician to overlook his opportunity to annihilate the Federalists.He hoped to absorb them in his own party, "to unite the names of Federalists and Republicans." Moderate Federalists, who possessed sufficient gifts of grace for conversion, he sedulously nursed.But he removed all officers for whose removal any special reason could be discovered.The "midnight appointments" of John Adams he refused to acknowledge, and he paid no heed to John Marshall's dicta in Marbury versus Madison.

He was zealous in discovering plausible excuses for making vacancies.The New York Evening Post described him as "gazing round, with wild anxiety furiously inquiring, 'how are vacancies to be obtained?'" Directly and indirectly, Jefferson effected, during his first term, 164 changes in the offices at his disposal, a large number for those days.This he did so craftily, with such delicate regard for geographical sensitiveness and with such a nice balance between fitness for office and the desire for office, that by the end of his second term he had not only consolidated our first disciplined and eager political party, but had quieted the storm against his policy of partizan proscription.

During the long regime of the Jeffersonian Republicans there were three significant movements.In January, 1811, Nathaniel Macon introduced his amendment to the Constitution providing that no member of Congress should receive a civil appointment "under the authority of the United States until the expiration of the presidential term in which such person shall have served as senator or representative." An amendment was offered by Josiah Quincy, making ineligible to appointment the relations by blood or marriage of any senator or representative.Nepotism was considered the curse of the civil service, and for twenty years similar amendments were discussed at almost every session of Congress.John Quincy Adams said that half of the members wanted office, and the other half wanted office for their relatives.

In 1820 the Four Years' Act substituted a four-year tenure of office, in place of a term at the pleasure of the President, for most of the federal appointments.The principal argument urged in favor of the law was that unsatisfactory civil servants could easily be dropped without reflection on their character.

Defalcations had been discovered to the amount of nearly a million dollars, due mainly to carelessness and gross inefficiency.It was further argued that any efficient incumbent need not be disquieted, for he would be reappointed.The law, however, fulfilled Jefferson's prophecy: it kept "in constant excitement all the hungry cormorants for office."What Jefferson began, Jackson consummated.The stage was now set for Democracy.Public office had been marshaled as a force in party maneuver.In his first annual message, Jackson announced his philosophy:

"There are perhaps few men who can for any great length of time enjoy office and power without being more or less under the influence of feelings unfavorable to the faithful discharge of their public duties....Office is considered as a species of property, and government rather as a means of promoting individual interests than as an instrument created solely for the service of the people.Corruption in some, and in others a perversion of correct feelings and principles, divert government from its legitimate ends and make it an engine for the support of the few at the expense of the many.The duties of all public offices are, or at least admit of being made, so plain, so simple that men of intelligence may readily qualify themselves for their performance....In a country where offices are created solely for the benefit of the people, no one man has any more intrinsic right to official station than another."The Senate refused Jackson's request for an extension of the Four Years' law to cover all positions in the civil service.It also refused to confirm some of his appointments, notably that of Van Buren as minister to Great Britain.The debate upon this appointment gave the spoilsman an epigram.Clay with directness pointed to Van Buren as the introducer "of the odious system of proscription for the exercise of the elective franchise in the government of the United States." He continued: "I understand it is the system on which the party in his own State, of which he is the reputed head, constantly acts.He was among the first of the secretaries to apply that system to the dismission of clerks of his department...known to me to be highly meritorious...

It is a detestable system."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 地球唯一修真者

    地球唯一修真者

    千百年来,地球的灵气干枯,天材地宝缺稀,逐渐,修真者开始失去踪迹,直至消亡!从此地球再也没有了修真者,仅仅剩下那些次时代产生的次品,也就是所谓的武者和异能战士。千年后的今天,苏毅成为了地球上唯一一个,也是最后的一个修真者!----------------------------------走过路过不要错过,求收藏~~求推荐票!!会经常爆发的哟~~
  • 邪帝的御兽狂妃

    邪帝的御兽狂妃

    她是现代的特工御兽师,一朝穿越在了痴傻的夜府小姐身上。好吧,既然穿都穿了,那就顺手替原主收拾几个败类,什么白莲花啊,心机婊啊,渣男啊,来啊来啊,互相伤害啊!等等,她好像还顺手拜了一个极品师傅。“师尊,人家想退婚!”“那就退!”“师尊,带人家升级啦!”“那就走!”“师尊,那些宝物灵兽,人家都想要呢!”“那就全部收下。”“师尊,人家想……呃,师尊,你亲我干嘛?”某人一笑:“挺甜的。”【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 哪个才是真爱

    哪个才是真爱

    他,是我们班的老大;而她,是我们班唯一可以打老大的女生,公认女神【女生公认】;他,是她的追求者,小霸王【就是老大,因为是被逼的只能叫小霸王】一旦打她,第一时间保护她。故事就由此展开。
  • 鸟眺望的地方叫作远方

    鸟眺望的地方叫作远方

    本书是一本潘云贵个人作品集,精选了几十篇潘云贵创作以来最具代表性的作品。作为90后代表性作家,潘云贵的文章着墨于青春,把属于这个年龄的生活的精彩表露无遗,有人说青春是残酷的,但是潘云贵笔下的青春是温暖的,当你感觉青春令人窒息时,不妨读读这些美文,谁让他是最精湛的心灵治愈系高手呢。
  • 最强护花雇佣兵

    最强护花雇佣兵

    许林,佣兵界的传奇人物...美女护花——青春火爆的辣女——温柔妖娆的御姐——善解人意的小清新活雷达,这不仅仅只是传说,这还是一场意外……
  • 古代金牌经纪人

    古代金牌经纪人

    此书乃试验品,不完整,请勿入!推荐本人的新书《机甲猎手》,欢迎各位大人莅临指导!
  • 我的学生是神仙

    我的学生是神仙

    完了,完了,完了,周小道觉得自己的人生彻底变了。太白金星托梦给告诉自己,仙界已经被熊孩子给霸占了,他们无所事事,整天就是成群结队打架斗殴,今天没事去偷偷蟠桃,明天没事想吃狗肉,就打哮天犬的主意。为了让这群超级仙二代能有所改正,天庭任命周小道同志为天庭教师。每个月定时派送几名超级仙二代下凡,让周小道循循教导,没事就抽两鞭子,不开心就饿他们几顿,上头发话了,只要能教育好,以后就位列仙班,前途不可限量。“你是二郎真君的儿子?八九玄功能传给我吗?我就是那种万中无一的天才。”“你是镇元子的侄子?下次记得给为师带点人参果来,为师穷苦命还没吃过这种果子。”“你是大圣的儿子?小圣兄,那帮人欺负我,帮我揍他们。”“什么?你是妲己的女儿?咳咳咳,为师帮你检查下身体……”周小道一脸严肃道。
  • 浮生逍遥录

    浮生逍遥录

    凡人间多有修士的传闻:有石猴破山裂地而出,有生而悟道之人游历世间,有人背生双翼,御风而行,有人出于穷山恶水之地,摸爬滚打无所不用其极。天赐历一百年,战火纷飞;乱世群星闪耀,隐世山门纷纷入世。从金陵一个破败小院的废墟中,走出一个少年。从此世间少了一个管账的少年,多了一个李平。他记着老师的那句话:如果不能平庸,那便去平天下。
  • 凰舞倾歌

    凰舞倾歌

    明明是个悲催到极点的娃,可是穿越来却被人满地追杀。老虎不发威,到老娘是吃素的啊!管你有多厉害,先打了再说。打完就跑,可是却被某个妖孽大爷给当场‘捉奸’,直接‘绑’着走人。喂喂,要不要这么欠扁!就算老娘长得如此沉鱼落雁、闭月羞花,可也不能这么大刺刺地把老娘带走啊!不爽不爽,极度不爽!不管怎样,都要将追杀她的幕后黑手找出来。结果查到的真相实在是太惊悚了,嫡姐强了未婚夫,新婚之夜还将她踢出了本家,最后还来个毁尸灭迹。天,要不要这么彪悍,看老娘如何女扮男装,再来个下马威。想坑老娘,下辈子吧!
  • 幽冥使者

    幽冥使者

    我做梦都没想到,我经营的小店竟然是人间通往冥界的大门所在;自从一个美女神棍死皮赖脸的住进来以后,我就经常看见各种各样小鬼穿梭在店里……好好的门店竟然变成了一个彻头彻尾的鬼店!