Accountability is essential not only to remove poor performers, but also to instill pride and responsibility in public culture. Mutual trust is difficult when everyone knows performance doesn’t matter. “We note deep disaffection within the public service,” the 2003 Volcker Commission concluded. “They resent the protections provided to those poor performers among them who impede their own work and drag down the reputation of all government workers.” Like obsolete infrastructure, America’s civil service framework should be largely scrapped. Numerous reform proposals have gone nowhere because of union opposition.
Trump’s Schedule F points the way to a bolder approach — to start remaking civil service by executive order. Article II of the Constitution provides that “The executive Power shall be vested in a President.” Numerous rulings by the Supreme Court have limited Congress’s ability to impinge on “executive power” regarding personnel judgments. Under these rulings, a president could disavow key aspects of civil service law, including:
— elaborate disciplinary procedures that make it impractical to terminate, discipline, or even give an honest job performance evaluation;
— the statutory mandate to collectively bargain with unions; and,
— the mechanistic hiring procedures that drive away good candidates.
By executive order, the president could create a genuine merit system. The new system should aim to inspire trust, not fear. Giving officials responsibility for results will attract qualified applicants who want to make a difference. Giving supervisors responsibility to make accountability judgments will inspire mutual trust that all are held to the same standard. Protecting against unfair personnel decisions can be achieved not by legal trials, but by giving oversight authority to an independent inspector or committee.
Congress will continue to kick the can down the road until forced to act. By asserting the constitutional powers of the executive, the president can provoke a constitutional challenge to be decided by the Supreme Court. Remaking civil service by executive order might also prod Congress into a long overdue modernization of the operating machinery of government.
Until then, the main products of Washington will be paralysis and waste.
Philip K. Howard is a longtime leader of government and legal reform in America. He is Chair of Common Good and has advised both parties on needed reforms. He is also a bestselling author whose latest book, Everyday Freedom, was reviewed by the Forum last year.