chAPTeR eleven • The BuReAucRAcy 251
Cabinet Department
One of the fifteen major
departments of the
executive branch.
Line Organization
In the federal government,
an administrative unit that
is directly accountable to
the president.
Independent
Executive Agency
A federal agency that
is not part of a cabinet
department but reports
directly to the president.
cabinet departments
The fifteen cabinet departments are the major service organizations of the federal gov-
ernment. They can also be described in management terms as line organizations. This
means that they are directly accountable to the president and are responsible for perform-
ing government functions, such as printing money and training troops. These departments
were created by Congress when the need for each department arose. The first department
to be created was State, and the most recent one was Homeland Security, established in
- A president might ask that a new department be created or an old one abolished,
but the president has no power to do so without legislative approval from Congress.
Each department is headed by a secretary (except for the Justice Department, which
is headed by the attorney general). Each department also has several levels of under-
secretaries, assistant secretaries, and other personnel.
Presidents theoretically have considerable control over the cabinet departments,
because presidents are able to appoint or fire all of the top officials. Even cabinet depart-
ments do not always respond to the president’s wishes, though. One reason why presidents
are frequently unhappy with their departments is that the entire bureaucratic structure
below the top political levels is staffed by permanent employees. Many of these employees
are committed to established programs or procedures and resist change. Table 11–2 on
pages 254–255 shows that each cabinet (executive) department employs thousands of
individuals, only a handful of whom are under the direct control of the president. The table
also describes some of the functions of each of the departments.
Independent executive Agencies
independent executive agencies are bureaucratic organizations that are not located
within a department but report directly to the president, who appoints their chief offi-
cials. When a new federal agency is created—the Environmental Protection Agency, for
FIGuRe 11–2: Federal Government spending, Fiscal year 2013
Source: usgovernmentspending.com.
- Everything else 17%
- Interest on debt 6%
- Veterans’ benefits 4%
- Military defense 18%
- Miscellaneous
low-income
and disability
support 6%- Social Security 22%
- Medicare 14%
- Medicaid and CHIP 8%
- SNAP and nutrition 3%
- Unemployment
compensation 2%
Social Media
in Politics
Most federal agencies
now have a social media
presence, and the Centers
for Disease Control offers
one of the best. For up-to-
the-minute health advice,
follow CDCgov on Twitter.
For hilarious advice on
what to do in a natural
disaster, search on “cdc
zombie apocalypse” on
Twitter.
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