Bush Praised By Both Parties for Transition Planning (Update2)
By Edwin Chen
Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- President George W. Bush is leaving
office with some of the lowest job-approval ratings in history.
He's being assailed by both of his would-be successors, one of
whom will inherit two wars and the most severe financial crisis
since the Great Depression.
Meanwhile, Bush is engineering what may be the most
carefully considered and potentially successful presidential
transition in modern times, both Democrats and Republicans
close to the process say.
The president started the preparations last spring,
ordering federal agencies to get ready for a new
administration, with deadlines for various tasks. By August,
White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten had persuaded
representatives of Republican John McCain and Democrat Barack
Obama to join in. The advance work may get the new president
off to a fast start, participants say.
``I do feel pretty good about this one,'' says Harrison
Wellford, a former White House and congressional aide who has
worked on presidential transitions since Jimmy Carter's back in
1976 and is now advising Obama. ``The White House and the
agencies are doing a good job, learning from mistakes of the
past.''
That planning, Wellford says, will better prepare the
president-elect for the ``onrushing freight train of
decisions,'' including making some 2,000 appointments.
Seamless Transfer
The imperatives of a seamless transfer of power have
seldom if ever been greater.
``This is probably the most important transition we've
seen in the modern presidency,'' says John P. Burke, a
University of Vermont political scientist who has written books
about presidential changeovers. ``We're not dealing with a
normal transition, but a very extraordinary set of
circumstances.''
Since the crisis erupted, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
has conferred numerous times with McCain and Obama. The
administration is making sure each side receives ``religiously
equal'' amounts of time, even simultaneously including
representatives from both campaigns in some briefings, says
Clay Johnson III, a White House official supervising the
planning.
Top officials at the Treasury Department have signaled to
both campaigns that they will work to bring on board -- even
before Jan. 20 -- a replacement for Neel Kashkari as chief of
the department's financial-rescue plan, according to Treasury
spokeswoman Brookly McLaughlin.
Early Action?
Last month, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher
Dodd said Bush should even consider nominating his successor's
choice for Treasury secretary to reassure investors and
consumers.
The General Services Administration, the government's
landlord agency, has set aside 120,000 square feet of
transition office space downtown, enough for about 500 people.
By law, the agency can turn over the ``keys'' to the president-
elect and his staff as early as 12:01 a.m. Nov. 5, said Tim
Horne, an agency transition manager.
``We're setting up a fully functioning office,'' Horne
said in a briefing for reporters today. ``We're ready now.''
Bush plans to convene a Cabinet meeting early this month
to receive agency-by-agency updates on their readiness, says
Johnson, now deputy director of the White House Office of
Management and Budget. He says the 44th president will be
``better prepared than any prior administration.''
Both Sides of Fence
Johnson has experience on the other side of the fence. In
the spring of 1999, months before then-Texas Governor Bush
declared his presidential candidacy, Johnson began preparing
for his possible assumption of power.
Academics credit that advance planning for Bush's well-
orchestrated transition in 2000-2001 despite the 37-day
struggle over the election outcome that halved the official
changeover period.
The Bush administration started off strong largely because
of Andrew Card, Burke says. Card was designated Bush's
contingency White House chief of staff on election night 2000
and ``put together the White House staff while everybody was
focusing on Florida,'' Burke says.
Even in less momentous times, the consequences of a well-
executed transition -- or a mistake-ridden one -- can have a
lasting impact on a presidency.
Lasting Impact
Wellford says that ``poorly planned transitions,''
especially in crisis periods, ``can hurt the president-elect,
reduce his mandate and increase the risks of failure in his
first year, or even his first term.''
The detailed planning and cooperation between the
administration and the McCain and Obama camps is a far cry from
earlier eras.
After the 1932 election, amid the Great Depression, newly
elected Franklin D. Roosevelt spurned entreaties from his
predecessor, Herbert Hoover, to work together on plans to
rescue the economy and the nation's banks.
Twenty years later, Harry Truman set the modern standard
by hosting Dwight Eisenhower and providing him with briefing
papers, says Martha Joynt Kumar, director of the White House
Transition Project, a nonpartisan group that provides
information to transition teams.
Setting aside their personal enmity, Truman also set a
precedent by providing intelligence briefings to both
presidential candidates during the campaign, Kumar says.
Chilly Relations
Still, institutional cooperation doesn't guarantee warm
personal relations. Truman and Eisenhower, for instance, didn't
speak as they rode from the White House to the Capitol for
Eisenhower's inauguration. Given the criticisms directed at
Bush this year by both presidential nominees, the temperature
in the presidential limousine on Jan. 20, Inauguration Day, is
anybody's guess.
To avoid seeming presumptuous, the Obama and McCain
campaigns are reluctant to discuss their transition
preparations, though Obama said in an Oct. 29 ABC television
interview that voters have a right to expect that the
president-elect ``will hit the ground running.''
The two leaders of McCain's transition efforts, Washington
lobbyist William Timmons and former Navy Secretary John Lehman,
declined to comment.
``We'll be well-organized and we'll be ready,'' said Rick
Davis, McCain's campaign manager.
At the Center for American Progress, a Democratic-leaning
Washington research group headed by John Podesta, a former
White House chief of staff for President Bill Clinton,
transition planning for Obama has been under way for months.
Work in Progress
Among the array of questions being discussed is whether to
restructure the National Security Council in light of post-
Sept. 11 concerns about domestic security, says P.J. Crowley,
who worked in Clinton's NSC and is leading those discussions.
``I give the Bush administration credit,'' Crowley says.
``They recognized they'd be turning over two active wars and a
Department of Homeland Security that's still a work-in-
progress.''
Just staffing a new administration is an enormous task:
The transition can expect 40,000 or more job applications, and
``you've got to be extremely well-organized in handing this
massive flow,'' says Wellford.
``President Clinton's transition team was unprepared for
the tidal wave of applicants and paid a heavy price for
mismanaging it,'' he adds.
Insufficient Vetting
Former Bush aide Card says one common mistake is
insufficiently vetting high-level nominees. Ensuing
controversies can sap a new administration's momentum, he says.
Another misguided impulse among some presidents is to name
a Cabinet at the expense of forming a senior White House staff,
says James Thurber, director of the Center for Congressional
and Presidential Studies at American University in Washington.
``What you end up with is a Cabinet in place but nobody in
the White House to help orchestrate what's going on,'' Johnson
says.
Experts caution that cooperation between the campaigns and
the White House hardly ensures a successful transition.
``Something's going to go wrong in this next transition, I
guarantee you that,'' says Paul Light, a New York University
public-service professor. ``What we don't know is what it'll be
or how the new administration's going to handle it.''
Moreover, adds Wellford, ``unfortunately, good transitions
do not guarantee good presidents. George W. Bush had a model
transition but a failed presidency.''
To contact the reporter on this story:
Edwin Chen in Coral Gables, Florida at
echen32@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: November 3, 2008 16:36 EST