A Presidential Civil Service

A Presidential Civil Service

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A Presidential Civil Service offers a comprehensive and definitive study of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Liaison Office for Personnel Management (LOPM). Established in 1939 following the release of Roosevelt’s Brownlow Committee report, LOPM became a key milestone in the evolution of the contemporary executive-focused civil service.
 
The Progressive Movement of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries comprised groups across the political spectrum with quite different. All, however, agreed on the need for a politically autonomous and independent federal Civil Service Commission (CSC) to eliminate patronage and political favoritism. In A Presidential Civil Service, public administration scholar Mordecai Lee explores two models open to later reformers: continuing a merit-based system isolated from politics or a management-based system subordinated to the executive and grounded in the growing field of managerial science.
 
Roosevelt’s 1937 Brownlow Committee, formally known as the President’s Committee on Administrative Management, has been widely studied including its recommendation to disband the CSC and replace it with a presidential personnel director. What has never been documented in detail was Roosevelt’s effort to implement that recommendation over the objections of Congress by establishing the LOPM as a nonstatutory agency.
 
The role and existence of LOPM from 1939 to 1945 has been largely dismissed in the history of public administration. Lee’s meticulously researched A Presidential Civil Service, however, persuasively shows that LOPM played a critical role in overseeing personnel policy. It was involved in every major HR initiative before and during World War II. Though small, the agency’s deft leadership almost always succeeded at impelling the CSC to follow its lead.
 
Roosevelt’s actions were in fact an artful and creative victory, a move finally vindicated when, in 1978, Congress abolished the CSC and replaced it with an Office of Personnel Management headed by a presidential appointee. A Presidential Civil Service offers a fascinating account and vital reassessment of the enduring legacy of Roosevelt’s LOPM.
A Presidential Civil Service is a masterful account of the founding of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Liaison Office for Personnel Management (LOPM), and his use of LOPM to demonstrate the efficacy of a management-oriented federal civil service over a purely merit-based Civil Service Commission.
Mordecai Lee is a professor of urban planning at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the author of Bureaus of Efficiency: Reforming Local Government in the Progressive Era; Institutionalizing Congress and the Presidency: The U.S. Bureau of Efficiency, 1916–1933; and The First Presidential Communications Agency: FDR’s Office of Government Reports. Lee has also served as an elected member of the Wisconsin State Legislature Assembly and Senate.
Preface

Abbreviations

Introduction

1. Origins of the Idea of a Presidential Personnel Agency, 1913–1936

2. The Political Battle over Creating a Presidential Personnel Agency, 1937–1939

3. FDR Constructs a Personnel Management Apparatus, 1939

4. The Liaison Office for Personnel Management in Operation, 1939–1941

5. The Liaison Office for Personnel Management in World War II, 1942–1945

6. From the Liaison Office for Personnel Management to a Full-Fledged Presidential Personnel Agency, 1945–1979

Conclusion

Bibliography

Index

Additional information

Dimensions 1 × 6 × 9 in