About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all short publications by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Type
- Title


THE TRANSITION TO GOVERNING PROJECT
About the Project
Events
Books
Short Publications
Codirectors
Links

Home >  Research Areas >  Transition to Governing Project >  Project Unveils New Software for Presidential Appointees
Project Unveils New Software for Presidential Appointees
Print Mail
Transition to Governing Newsletter
Posted: Monday, January 1, 2001
ARTICLES
Publications Date: January 1, 2001

Over the past four decades, the presidential appointments process has become increasingly lengthy and difficult. Prospective appointees must complete extraordinary amounts of paperwork and devote considerable amounts of time, money, and energy to the process. To make the process easier, political scientist Terry Sullivan and a team of paperwork experts and software designers have created a software program called Nomination Forms Online, a simplified system in which nominees can consolidate the paperwork and complete it online.

Mr. Sullivan is associate director of the White House 2001 Project, which is a partner of the Transition to Governing Project. Mr. Sullivan held a demonstration of the software on January 25 at the American Enterprise Institute. He was joined by former secretary of health and human services Donna Shalala and former attorney general Richard Thornburgh, who discussed many of the problems with the appointments process and several ways in which it could be improved.

Related Links
Transition to Governing Project


TGP Newsletter

Fall 1999
This issue covers the appointments process and think tanks.

Fall 2000
This issue covers Preparing to Be President, how Dick Cheney and Al Gore would govern, and the permanent campaign and its future.

Winter 2001
This issue assesses recent presidential transitions, new software for presidential appointees, and revolving door ethics.


The Overstretched FBI

Resident Scholar Norman J. Ornstein  
Norman J. Ornstein
 
The Washington Post

June 4, 2002

Ornstein discusses reforms to FBI checks to improve the presidential appointments process.


Read the "Hess Report on Campaign Coverage in Nightly Network News."

New software released to help presidential nominees with the appointments process.

Read an article from the May 2002 Journal of Politics, written by Matthew J. Dickinson of Middlebury College and Kathryn Dunn Tenpas of Brookings: "Explaining Increasing Turnover Rates among Presidential Advisers, 1929-1997."