White House Interview Program
Preparing the White House Staff to Govern
The Needs
Establishing an Institutional Memory. There
is no institutional memory in a White House. Unlike corporations both
large and small, a White House begins without a record of what its previous
occupants did. Our project will provide incoming staff with information
on the functions, organizational schemes, and roles played by the heads
of selected White House offices. The White House offices are: Chief of
Staff, Staff Secretary, Press Office, Office of Communications, Office
of Counsel to the President, and Office of Administration.
Making Effective Use of Good Will Produced by Victory
and a Suspension of Partisanship. There is a recognized sense
among the political community as well as the public at large that a President
should be provided an opportunity to govern without insistent carping
of his enemies. That period early in a President's term is both precious
and brief. Our program is aimed at providing information at a time when
it can be used most effectively.
The Program
Building a Base of Comparable Information Across Administrations.
Beginning with the Nixon White House, we will gather information on selected
White House offices in order to develop comparable information across
the six administrations. We will interview approximately 75 former officials
and supplement our interviews with materials from presidential libraries
and from secondary sources.
Developing Materials Positioning the Incoming Staff
to Govern. What sets us apart from earlier transition efforts
is our interest in preparing and delivering materials based on the information
we glean from our interviews that will position the incoming staff to
meet their own goals. Rather than tell the new group how they should organize
the White House, we will provide them with information on how it has been
done in the past and then describe the outcomes.
A Nonpartisan Project Funded by The Pew Charitable
Trusts. Funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, a foundation known
for the stature of its projects and the nonpartisan nature of its organization,
we have a special objectivity. We are not associated with a particular
candidate for President or persons seeking positions with the incoming
administration.
Broad Based Program Implemented by Leading Presidency
Scholars. The interviews will be conducted mainly by Professor
Martha Kumar, but some will be completed by presidency scholars who have
experience interviewing White House officials and who write about the
subjects under study, including such recognized scholars as Professors
George Edwards, Erwin Hargrove, Shirley Warshaw, and Stephen Wayne. Creating
the interview protocol is a board of scholars associated with the Presidency
Research Group, a section of the American Political Science Association,
Program Impact
A Program Designed to Meet the Transition Needs Identified
by Former White House Staff. Our program responds to the information
needs identified by former White House officials in interviews with them.
A Transition Information Delivery System Unparalleled
in its Flexibility. Since the Web site can be accessed by authorized
individuals at any given time, the information delivery system represents
a more flexible system than has ever before existed for incoming staff.
The project will also provide paper copies of its materials.
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