What are the key elements of the government

Begin your exploration of the features of Australia’s system of government with this short introduction. Discover how power is shared and managed between different groups in Australia.

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What are the key elements of the government

The Australian system of government.

Parliamentary Education Office (PEO.GOV.AU)

What are the key elements of the government

Parliamentary Education Office (PEO.GOV.AU)

This graphic illustrates the 5 components of the Australian system of government:

  • democracy
  • representative democracy
  • consitution
  • constitutional monarchy
  • federation of states

A system of government is the structure and systems by which a country is run. Australia is a democratic country that has a mixed system of government.

Australia’s system of government is based on the British Westminster system.

Things you need to know

  • Australia has a mixed system of government. It is a:
    • Representative democracy—Australians vote for members of parliament to make laws on their behalf.
    • Constitutional monarchy—The King is Australia’s head of state but does not have absolute power and is required to follow the Australian Constitution. The King gives his powers to the Governor-General.
    • Federation of states—A Federation is a group of states who have given some of their law-making powers to a national government and kept some law-making powers for local matters.
  • An important feature of Australia’s system of government is how the power to make and manage laws is shared between the parliament, the government and the courts. This is called the separation of powers.

A country can choose to change its system of government. For example, India, Fiji and Ireland were constitutional monarchies but are now republics with a president as their head of state.   

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Baseline reference

The real goal here is not to offer an engaging and captivating narrative, a good read, but to provide a baseline reference on what a typical modern, western-style government looks like, with the real goal of defining simply the starting point for discussion of activities that occur in the context of government, as well as the starting point for discussion of how to improve government, to make it better and closer to a more ideal government.

Definition

Government is the vehicle for governance of society, which is the establishment and enforcement of rules and provisioning of basic services which society requires but which would otherwise not be available or might be in conflict between individuals and the various subdivisions within society.

Role in society

We have a chicken and egg problem with respect to whether government devolves from society or society devolves from government. They have both evolved together as a feedback loop, since the days of the earliest human tribes and villages. Even animal groups have a leader and hierarchical status or pecking order.

Ideal government

This paper is intended to be descriptive rather than prescriptive, focused on the reality of government today rather than speculation about a more ideal form of government in a more ideal world.

Better government

Again, this paper focus on the reality of what we have today rather than on proposing changes that progress in the direction of a more ideal government.

Just society

Fairness is a fundamental quality and requirement for a modern, western-style society. In addition to the mere promise of equality and justice, members of society must actually feel and experience a sense of fairness and justness in their daily lives and in all of their interactions with the apparatus of governance and social order.

Tyranny

A fundamental of a just society is freedom from tyranny, freedom from the arbitrary, capricious whim of a dictator or ruling elite.

Power

Individuals and groups tend to seek and accumulate power. That is part of human nature, but can result in the abuse, death, or enslavement of weaker individuals and groups. One of the primary roles of government is to moderate and balance the accumulation of power to dramatically reduce the abuses that result from unchecked power.

Role of government

This paper focuses on the abstract role of government in society rather than delving into specific functional roles that government fulfills or could or shouldn’t have in society. Not that a discussion of the functional roles of government is not of great interest, but the framework described by this paper is independent of which specific functional roles government should play in society.

  • Education
  • Health care
  • Housing
  • Weather reporting and forecasting
  • Illegal drug use and trafficking
  • Alcohol, tobacco, and firearms
  • Medical drug development and safety
  • Medical and health care safety
  • Food production and safety
  • Nutrition
  • Social welfare, including Social Security and various welfare programs
  • Scientific research
  • Social research
  • Vehicle and transportation safety
  • Environmental protection
  • Wilderness preservation
  • Urban redevelopment
  • Workplace and worker safety
  • Labor relations
  • Civil rights protection
  • Equal opportunity, countering discrimination
  • Support for the arts
  • Historical preservation
  • Economic and technology development
  • Economic statistics
  • Money and monetary policy — defining unit of money, currency, coins, and monetary policy for controlling the supply of money and inflation
  • Credit — supplement the private sector banking system, such as the SBA and mortgage loans

General welfare of society

Although the term welfare is commonly applied specifically to financial social support programs for those in need, the general concept of the general welfare of society refers to three main qualities of life for the members of society:

  • Health
  • Happiness
  • Fortunes or success

Security

To achieve peace of mind, members of society need to feel safe from:

  • Invasion and military attack
  • Insurrection and other domestic unrest
  • Threats while traveling abroad
  • Threats to vital interests abroad
  • Natural disaster
  • Severe weather
  • Wild animals
  • Poisonous plants
  • Crime
  • Fire
  • Explosion
  • Toxic chemical release
  • Unsafe buildings
  • Unsafe equipment
  • Accidents
  • Disease
  • Unsafe water
  • Unsafe air
  • Erosion of land
  • Radiation
  • Unsafe food
  • Unsafe drugs
  • Dangerous or illegal drugs
  • Unsafe medical treatment
  • Abuse of power
  • Infringement of rights
  • Monitoring and intelligence gathering to detect early warning signals
  • Preventing, deterring, or avoiding the threat
  • Minimizing the threat
  • Moderating the threat
  • Combating the threat
  • Curing the threat
  • Mitigating the threat
  • Otherwise responding to the threat
  • Recovery from the threat
  • Analyze for lessons learned — improve security for future occurrences of the threat
  • National security
  • Crime
  • Rights
  • Environment
  • Safety
  • Health

Diversity

Diversity is a general goodness in society that has multiple advantages, such as:

  • Enhanced survival of society in the face of evolving and unknown threats
  • Inclusiveness to empower individuals to feel more invested in society and more welcome in communities
  • Stronger sense of community that enables the community to be richer, stronger, and durable
  • Enhanced potential for specialization
  • Greater opportunity for participation
  • Greater market for goods and services
  • Greater opportunity for use of goods and services
  • Greater opportunity for growth and expansion of society

Growth and expansion

Growth and expansion in a society can occur in many dimensions, including:

  • Raw numbers, population
  • Greater diversity
  • More goods and services
  • More communities
  • More varied and diverse communities
  • More government services
  • More businesses
  • More organizations
  • More types of organizations
  • Limited physical resources, including land, food, water, energy, housing
  • Limited capacity of communities to provide both services and an enduring sense of community
  • Social systems and governance can keep pace with the rate of growth and expansion

The simple model of government

The starting point for the elements of government is the traditional model of the three branches of government:

  • Executive
  • Legislative
  • Judicial

The state

Collectively, the branches of government are generally and generically referred to as the state. Technically, the state is the more abstract entity that corresponds to the apparatus for defining and maintaining the country. The government is the manifestation of the state. The U.S. Constitution defines the state, the U.S. government implements the Constitution. Generally, the terms government and state can be used as synonyms.

The country

Generally, the terms country and state are synonyms, although country will tend to refer a little more to the geographic and social aspects while state will refer a little more to the political and government aspects.

Submission to authority

The cornerstone of any social order is the submission to the authority of the government by all members of society. In exchange, government agrees to recognize the rights of the individual members of society and provide them with a variety of services, including security.

Rule of law

In opposition to tyranny, the rule of law requires that government act in accordance with laws approved by elected representatives of the people rather than by officials and bureaucrats acting on whim.

Productive pursuits

A primary goal of any social order and its government is to optimize the productive capacity of the group as a whole. In other words, assuring that the vast majority of society are engaged in productive pursuits that maximize the net well-being and peace of mind of the group both as a whole and as individual members of society.

  • Working
  • Raising children
  • Growing, processing, distributing, and preparing food
  • Creating goods
  • Providing services
  • Educating and training members of society
  • Administering government
  • Providing national defense and law enforcement
  • Providing diversions (e.g., entertainment and arts) that enhance or facilitate productive pursuits
  • Advocacy
  • Educational grants
  • Research grants
  • Tax subsidies
  • Government contracts
  • Infrastructure advocacy and investment

Social contract

Government is essentially the embodiment of the general consensus of the social contract for the country. It may not be formally discussed in that way, but the net sum of all of the effort that goes into defining government is effectively defining the social contract as well.

Social agreement on governance

There is not necessarily an ideal form of government for all societies. Many forms have been tried throughout human history. The current form of government used in modern, western-style societies evolved dramatically over the past 250 years, but based in part on elements developed 2,500 years ago and earlier. Assent on the form of governance is a two-step process, first with the people as individuals assenting to local leaders they can trust, who then come together at a regional or national level to agree upon a form of government that they can trust. Assent remains ultimately with the people, but mindful that some form of elite leadership is needed to implement the will of the people.

Formal agreement on governance

Discussions and debate result in informal agreement on the governance to be used by a country. Once settled informally, a formal recognition of the agreed form of governance is needed. A constitution is the normal method for doing this.

Constitution

A constitution is the formal document that explicitly expresses the principles, structure, and processes upon which the state will exist and operate. It is effectively the social contract for the state,, or at least its foundation.

  1. Declaration of Independence — the justification for the new country.
  2. Articles of Confederation — an initial but too-weak effort to bind the former colonies together.
  3. Federalist papers — public debate about the nature of the federal government.
  4. U.S. Constitution — preliminary result of those debates.
  5. Bill of Rights — initial supplement that clarified the extent to which government was to refrain from interference with the lives of the people.
  6. Amendments — a long, never-ending sequences of adjustments, some correcting existing flaws and some reflecting changing circumstances and sentiment.

Limited government

A limited government is generally one whose powers are limited to those enumerated within the constitution for that government. The intent of this doctrine of enumerated powers is that the people retain all powers and rights not explicitly enumerated for government in the constitution.

State constitutions

Each of the states in the United States remains sovereign and has its own government. As such, each state declares its own principles, structure, and processes in its own state constitution.

Rights

Rights are very important to the people, business, and all nongovernmental organizations, and although they are a core component of the framework of the country, they are not part of government per se. The intent is that government recognize and respects rights, but that the rights exist even absent the government, as natural rights.

  • Unalienable or natural rights presumed to exist for all people, completely independent of government.
  • Constitutional rights — specifically enumerated by the U.S. Constitution.
  • Civil rights — specifically enumerated by statutory law.

Values, government as culture

Values are generally more a function of the overall society, but since government is a component of society it is natural that at least some commonly shared values would be incorporated into the culture of government itself.

  • Unalienable, natural rights including life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness
  • Constitutional rights in general
  • Equality — before the law, opportunity
  • Integrity and freedom from corruption
  • Honesty
  • Merit
  • Nondiscrimination
  • Loyalty, obedience
  • Bearing responsibility and behaving responsibly
  • Duty to serve the people
  • Selflessness

Natural rights

Natural rights, also known as unalienable rights in the U.S. Declaration of Independence are those rights that are presumed to exist for all individuals, even before government enters the picture. These are rights not because they are granted by government, but regardless of government.

Constitutional rights

The U.S. Constitution’s Bill of Rights specifically enumerates rights of individuals, both as individuals and acting in concert with other individuals.

Civil rights

Civil rights are those rights which are specifically recognized and granted by government through statutory law. Some may argue that they are natural rights as well, but the point is that legislation specifically highlights certain rights that had been problematic in certain regions of the country and certain segments of society.

  • Right to vote and making it easier or even possible to register to vote
  • Nondiscriminatory public accommodation in hotels, restaurants, theaters, stores, etc.
  • Nondiscrimination for employment
  • Nondiscrimination for education

Human rights

International organizations and international law recognize rights possessed by all individuals simply as a matter of them being human beings, regardless of what local or national governments they may be subject to or what rights those governments may grant or acknowledge.

Property rights

Most governments recognize the rights of individuals to acquire and possess property. The main forms of property being:

  • Real estate — land, buildings
  • Personal possessions
  • Securities — stocks and bonds
  • Intellectual property

Intellectual property

Government assures protection of intellectual property rights, including:

  • Trademark
  • Patent
  • Copyright
  • Trade secret

Slavery

Slavery is also a form of property right.

Non-chattel slavery

Non-chattel slavery, with no legal right of ownership of humans as slaves as property per se, but with individuals held under threat of force or other involuntary inducement, effectively as slaves, remains around the world, most commonly as human trafficking and various forms of servitude which effectively treat human beings as if they were property even thought there is no legal recognition of property rights per se.

Servitude

Individuals who are in economic distress are frequently placed in work environments, such as homes, where they are theoretically simply workers, but are effectively treated as slaves, property, with essentially no rights.

Human trafficking

Individuals are sometimes kidnapped, bought, or tricked into situations where they are removed from the environment that they know and feel comfortable and involuntarily transported (or tricked into voluntary compliance for transport) to another environment where they are completely dependent on the trafficker for all basic human needs.

Infringement of rights

Regardless of rights that people possess, it is always possible that individuals, groups, or government itself might fail to fully respect those rights. Processes are in place to prevent and compensate for any such infringement, but even those processes are subject to failure.

Conflict of rights

Although a malevolent infringement of the rights of others is unacceptable and typically illegal, it is very possible for a completely benevolent exercise of rights to conflict with the rights of others. Society must have robust protection and enforcement mechanisms for such conflicts to avoid disharmony. But, there may be situations where the benevolent exercise of a right cannot be achieved without a conflict, which requires that the members of society exercise some degree of care and understanding to resolve the conflict amicably. In some cases, law enforcement may be required or parties may resort to the civil courts.

Limits of rights

Except for basic biological rights such as water, food, breathing, shelter, and sleep, no right is absolute. There are practical and social limits to rights. The two main limits to rights are to refrain from infringing on the rights of others and to preserve order in society, as well as to preserve society itself.

Discrimination

America is supposed to be a classless society, but a variety of forms of discrimination have dogged the country from the beginning, and unfortunately, people are not always treated fairly in society, suffering from a variety of categories of discrimination, such as:

  • Race
  • National origin
  • Ethnicity
  • Gender
  • Gender identity
  • Sexual orientation
  • Age
  • Appearance
  • Religious beliefs
  • Political beliefs
  • Disability
  • Pregnancy
  • Childbearing status

Morality

Moral values are somewhat subjective and generally of interest more for society as a whole, namely individuals and their families, rather than government.

Honesty

Telling the truth is recognized as an essential value at all levels of society, but veracity is also recognized as a problem at all levels of society. And many truths are quite subjective so that one person or group’s truth is another person or group’s lie.

  • Character flaws in the individual official
  • Corruption and conspiracy
  • Embarrassment
  • Political expediency
  • Concern that the people may not understand or accept the actual truth
  • Distrust or disdain for the people
  • Desire to shield the people from some ugly truth
  • Desire to maintain public calm and order in the face of some unsettling truth, event, or threat

Power struggles

One of the primary functions of government is to free society from the debilitating effects of power struggles, providing a level of stability and continuity that allows people to more comfortably live their daily lives so that they don’t have to wake up each day wondering who is in charge, what the new rules are, and what might be expected of them today that wasn’t yesterday.

The nation

Technically, a nation is more of a cultural rather than a political or geographic concept that can exist independently of formal country boundaries and formal government, but the general goal, and the reality for the U.S., is for the country and nation to be synonymous.

Overall structure of society

A separate paper on Elements of Society will focus on society of a country overall, but a simplified model of society has these elements:

  • Individuals, citizens
  • Families
  • Communities
  • Government
  • Business, industry, and commerce, collectively the economy
  • Education
  • Organized religion
  • Media, the press
  • Non-governmental organizations
  • Government
  • Business or the private sector
  • Civil society

Democracy and capitalism

It is difficult to cleanly separate the political domain from the economic domain since in practice they are somewhat intertwined.

  • Capitalism — both property and the means of production are privately owned.
  • Socialism — property remains privately owned but production is publicly owned.
  • Communism — both property and production are publicly, commonly owned, by the state.

Public sector and private sector

A lot of discussions about government and its role in society revolve around the simple binary division of the public sector and the private sector, with the former representing government, and the latter representing everything outside government, including the people and all nongovernmental organizations, but commonly using the term private sector as a synonym for commercial, for-profit, business.

Levels of government

Although the main focus here is national government, it is worth noting that it is the total governing structure or overlapping structures of the state or country as a whole that matter. Exactly how the various elements of government are parceled out is less important, at least in terms of our goal here, which is to discuss the elements of government (regardless of where or how they are implemented), particularly as they may relate to a discussion of civil society.

  • National or federal government
  • State governments — the geopolitical divisions within the country
  • Local governments, both town, city, and regional (e.g., county) as well

International law

There is the additional level of international law and relations between countries. In some ways international law should be considered above national law, but there is no true international sovereign, not even the United Nations, so the sovereignty of each country is the effective controlling force from a legal perspective. It may not seem right, but each country decides for itself what aspects of international law it will obey.

United Nations

The United Nations is a great opportunity for countries to come together to discuss important issues that transcend country boundaries, and even to agree to cooperate if there is sufficient consensus, but the UN is not a world government. It facilitates cooperation, but cannot enforce compliance, although individual member countries can singly or in concert act to enforce UN resolutions.

Transnational issues

Some practical issues cannot be resolved or controlled within national borders and require either cooperation between countries or unilateral action that may not be seen as strictly friendly or legal by some other country, such as:

  • Drug trafficking
  • Terrorism
  • Sex and slave trafficking
  • Smuggling of goods
  • Piracy
  • Intellectual property theft
  • Data transmission and storage

Coalitions

Individual countries can themselves agree to act in concert, known as a coalition, when agreement can be reached in the United Nations, and their actions can be under the color of a UN resolution, but ultimately they are individual countries acting under their own national, sovereign authority.

Allies

Short of outright coalitions, the moral support of other countries can prove invaluable, both at the international level with other nations, and within the country to comfort people that the nation is not going it alone.

Enumerated powers

The U.S. Constitution takes the approach of declaring that only a relatively few powers are reserved for the national, federal government, and that all other powers are reserved for the individual states of the union, or to the people themselves.

Expansion of powers

Granted, it can certainly seem that the federal government is much more powerful, with nuclear weapons, bombers, aircraft carriers, armies, and the Internal Revenue Service, among many other elements of power, but if the states have indeed ceded powers to the federal government, it is by their choice and acquiescence, not constitutional limitation.

Cooperation between governments

No government can operate completely on its own — governments and levels of governments tend to cooperate to some degree. Some of the common forms of cooperation:

  • Inter-national cooperation, such as treaties and bilateral and multilateral agreements and organizations, work at the United Nations, and coalitions.
  • National-state cooperation, such as grants, including welfare grants, constitutionally-recognized divisions, memorandums of understanding, harmonizing laws, and constitutions that overlap.
  • Inter-state cooperation, typically at the regional level, especially on transportation, such as the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
  • State-local and national-local cooperation, including grants, agreements on jurisdictions.
  • Local-local cooperation, between adjacent towns and cities or those within a region that share concerns.

Local communities

There is an old saying in Washington that ultimately all politics is local, meaning that even the grandest and highest levels of national and international governance ultimately reach back and touch individuals back in their local communities.

International cooperation

National country governments can cooperate in a number of ways:

  • United Nations
  • Treaties
  • Bilateral agreements, between two countries
  • Multilateral agreements, between multiple countries
  • Conferences of experts from countries coming together on shared interests, such as science, technology, social problems, economics, finance, and regulation
  • Coalitions, including joint military action

Institutions

Institutions are organizational structures that perform some function for society and persist indefinitely, such as:

  • Society as a whole
  • Government
  • The three branches of government
  • The White House
  • The cabinet departments
  • Federal agencies
  • The House of Representatives
  • The Senate
  • The Supreme Court
  • The military services
  • Democracy
  • Capitalism
  • Free and open markets
  • The people
  • Elections
  • The banking system

Functional Elements of government

Now, let’s finally dive down to some of the detail of the specific functional elements of government. Generally, the three main major branches of any government, the executive, the legislature, and the judiciary, are great categories, but hide the specific functional elements that real people and civil society actually care about.

National leaders

Each country will have one or more national leaders, one of whom is the head of state, and one of whom is the head of government. These are two distinct roles, which may be performed by two separate individuals or both roles may be played by the same individual. There may be additional national leadership roles other than these two in some cases.

Head of state

The head of state will tend to be more of an official and ceremonial role, typically reserved as a separate role from head of government for a monarchy such as in a constitutional or parliamentary monarchy.

Head of government

The head of government is the individual actually responsible for organizing and executing the functions of government for a country, as well as representing the country when negotiating with other countries. They are the true captain of the ship. If there is a distinct head of state they are the admiral while the captain still controls and runs the ship.

Elements of the executive branch

  • Supreme leader or chief executive — whether president, king, prime minister, chancellor, dictator or whatever, this is the captain of the ship who publicly and privately represents the state as a whole in terms of organizing and executing the executive functions of government, including negotiations with other countries.
  • Policy development — staff present the chief executive with options and turn executive decisions into specific policies and regulations.
  • Administration — the bureaucrats who actually execute policy and present the public face that citizens and other individuals interact with. This includes all of the cabinet level departments and agencies.
  • Operations — activities that directly impact society, including the economy, businesses, and individuals, such as air traffic control, operations of government-controlled infrastructure, safety inspections, weather service, border control, immigration, customs, Federal Reserve bank payment systems, postal service, social security, and health care exchanges.
  • Standards — creating and promulgating standards of measurement to facilitate commerce and government operations as well.
  • Research — government laboratories as well as research grants to non-government research facilities, including DARPA, NSF, CDC, NIST, NIH, and SBIR.
  • Promotion and advocacy — government has a role in promoting, encouraging, and advocating for a vibrant and inclusive economy, affordable housing, economical and safe transportation, quality and safe health care, safe and economical food and drugs, free and fair trade, and educational opportunities, among other objectives of national policy.
  • Competition — encouraging and assuring a free, open, and competitive market for commerce, as well as intervening on market failures, such as antitrust.
  • Subsidy — in response to market failures or to jump-start new markets, the government may directly fund operations of non-government entities.
  • Communications with the public — press conferences, press releases, fact sheets, direct media contact, and outreach and to respond to questions from the public, business, and organizations, to communicate policies and procedures, and reactions to events, sometimes for political damage control or at least to fend off political attacks.
  • Regulations and administrative law — law-like policies that the executive controls through policy development and administration.
  • Regulatory enforcement — similar to law enforcement but for regulations (e.g., OSHA, NRC, FCC, FAA.)
  • Law enforcement — national policing, such as the FBI, ATF, DEA, but focused on statutory laws enacted by Congress that are embodied in the United States Code (USC.)
  • Protection — deter and defend high-value individuals, such as government officials and dignitaries, and government facilities from assault, abduction, and attack.
  • Prosecution — the Department of Justice is responsible not for enforcing laws, but for judging whether to prosecute alleged criminal and civil offenses that have been detected by law enforcement.
  • Incarceration/Corrections of convicted federal offenders.
  • Defense — the military services tasked with physical protection of the country as a whole — Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines.
  • Commander in Chief — same as the chief executive, but it is the role that matters, focused on physical security of the country rather than on common day-to-day needs of the populace.
  • Intelligence — gathering of security-related information needed by the chief executive for security and defense issues.
  • Security — loosely includes defense as well, but focuses also on non-invasive threats (no armies or ships or aircraft in the sky), including terrorism, organized crime, drug and human trafficking, as well as border control, immigration, and customs.
  • Covert operations — defense and security military or para-military actions which are undertaken without publicity and even denied publicly.
  • Foreign policy and foreign relations — how the country interacts with other countries at all levels, government, business, nongovernmental organizations, and individual citizens, both to facilitate day to day activities as well as to pursue national strategic objectives, including treaties, international organizations and agreements, as well as basic diplomatic affairs, and to collaborate with and support defense and security matters.
  • Service Agencies — these are quasi-independent agencies of the government that are only loosely under control of the chief executive, each focused on a specific category of public service, such as Social Security Administration, FAA, FCC, SEC, NASA, NRC, CIA, NSA. Some of these are strictly independent, while others technically do report to cabinet level agencies. In some cases the only control of the chief executive is on appointment of commissioners, but moral suasion is always available as an indirect form of influence if not virtual control (who will turn down a call from the President?).
  • Infrastructure — although a lot of infrastructure spending and control for transportation, communications, power and energy, water, and sanitation happens at the state and local levels and in the private sector, some is directly controlled or at least nominally under the auspices of the chief executive. This includes the interstate highway system, Amtrak, TVA, and Bonneville Power Administration. At the inter-state level, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is a great example of government involvement and control of infrastructure. The Departments of Energy and Transportation, FCC, and FAA are examples of government involvement in infrastructure as well.
  • Safety — to promote and assure a level of safety from everyday and product hazards that individuals and organizations are unable to achieve on their own.
  • Emergency response — including the ability to call up the national guard for disasters, as well as FEMA, and the Coast Guard, and even the FBI.

The executive branch is organized as a number of departments and independent agencies.

Cabinet

The heads of the executive-level departments, the federal executive departments, and the heads of a couple of the independent executive agencies as well as a few other high-level officials, as well as the Vice President constitute the President’s cabinet, whose function is to advise the president on whatever matters he may seek advice.

Senior White House Leadership

The President has the authority to tell a lot of people what to do, but has only a very small direct staff, known as senior White House leadership, consisting of:

  • Chief of Staff
  • Deputy Chiefs of Staff (currently 2)
  • Senior Advisers (currently 3)

Executive Office of the President

Beyond the Senior White House Leadership, lies a vast bureaucracy called the Executive Office of the President which is overseen by the White House Chief of Staff and houses many of the individuals and groups that advise and assist the President, including the Office of Administration, as well as:

  • Council of Economic Advisers
  • Council on Environmental Quality
  • National Security Council
  • Office of Administration
  • Office of Management and Budget
  • Office of National Drug Control Policy
  • Office of Science and Technology Policy
  • Office of the United States Trade Representative
  • Office of the Vice President

Relative autonomy of departments and agencies

Cabinet-level departments, known as federal executive departments, report directly to the president and answer to his command, but operate with relative autonomy on a day to day basis and in general. Each department is like a separate ship with its own captain, with the president acting as admiral of the entire fleet.

Services

A major function of government is to provide essential services to the public. Generally these will be services that are not easily or readily provided by the private sector.

Policy

If services are the public face for government, policy is the brain, the thinking that decides and guides services. Policy is the blueprint and plan for how the conceptual services of government are actually implemented and delivered.

  1. Policy must achieve the goals established within government, as legislated by Congress or mandated by the executive branch.
  2. Policy must be palatable to the people, lest they rebel.
  3. Policy must be responsive to the needs and interests of the people, expressed and implied.
  4. Policy must have political support within the government, including Congress.
  5. Policy must fit within the overall financial budget of the government.

Incentives and subsidies

Advocacy alone may not be sufficient to sway enough citizens in favor of a decision or path. Financial incentives or subsidies may be required, typically in the form of a credit on income tax.

Welfare programs

Government is frequently called upon to provide financial assistance to individuals, families, groups, and communities in situations where it is deemed not possible for the recipients to sufficiently provide for their own well-being due to a variety of economic and social conditions.

  • Cash for food
  • Housing subsidy
  • Educational aid
  • Health care

Elements of the legislative branch

  • The legislature — the bodies that actual pass laws or changes to the legal code.
  • Chamber leadership — each of the two chambers, House and Senate, elects and appoints a variety of leaders, with each party having their own leaders.
  • Committees — the totality of the business conducted by each chamber of the legislature is parceled out to a multiplicity of independent committees, each handling a functional and related subset of the total business. Committees tend also have subcommittees to parcel out more focused subsets of the business. Each committee has leadership, members, and staff.
  • Committee leadership — each congressional committee and subcommittee has a chairperson who belongs to he majority party of the chamber (Senate or House) as well as a Ranking Member who belongs to the minority party of the chamber. Committee leaders are appointed by chamber leadership for each party from members of the committee, commonly based on seniority.
  • Committee members — elected members of each chamber are appointed to one or more committees or subcommittees based on their interests. The majority party has more members on each committee, assuring that the committee will likely vote along the same party lines as for the full chamber.
  • Committee staff — these unelected professionals are the ones actually drafting legislation and fully responsible for contriving the fine details of legislation. They are hired by and report to the Chief of Staff for the committee, themselves a hired, not elected, professional and are in addition to the elected legislators who are appointed members of the committee or subcommittee. The majority party and minority party each have their own committee staff, the majority Chief of Staff controlled by the committee chairperson and the minority Chief of Staff controlled by the minority or Ranking Member of the committee. The majority party has a larger budget for committee staff.
  • Member staff — these unelected professionals are responsible for guiding the elected members of Congress on how to vote on so much of the arcane legislation that is required even for seemingly simple tasks, as well as assisting constituents who are struggling with government in some way, and handling arrangements for public appearances and special meetings with individuals and groups with whom the member has some sort of special relationship, including major campaign donors. They are hired by and report to the member’s Chief of Staff, who themselves are a professional hired by and reporting to the elected member. More senior members and leadership will have larger staffs and budgets.
  • The law — once passed, laws have a life of their own, independent of what happens to the legislators who passed them or even whether the current legislature approves of them.
  • The legislative process — the mechanism by which laws are created, codified, changed, and possibly repealed. This includes congressional hearings, the congressional record, and other opportunities for entities outside of government to be aware of and participate in the legislative process.

Granted, all power in a modern, western-style democracy ultimately devolves from the people, but implicit in the concept of a representative democracy is that the people are too busy with their daily lives to deal with the minutiae and complexity of government.

Ask your congressman

Individuals are always free to request assistance from their elected representatives for navigating the complex structure of government.

Statutory law

Laws passed by Congress are referred to as statutory law, also known as statute law. A single provision of the law may be referred to as a statute.

United States Code

Statutory law, laws passed by Congress, are collected into what is known as the United States Code (U.S.C.), which is organized into a hierarchy of levels:

  • Title
  • Subtitle
  • Chapter
  • Subchapter
  • Part
  • Section
  • Subsection

Bills, acts, and laws

Congress doesn’t vote on laws per se. Legislation is in the form of a bill, which is a narrative on the purpose of the bill or law, coupled with instructions for how to revise the United States Code to have the effect of creating the intended law. A single bill may in fact create or revise more than one portion of the code.

Veto

The president can indeed say no to a bill approved by Congress. Members of Congress must then decide whether they have the energy and votes to override the veto.

Sponsoring bills

Passing legislation is really hard work. It doesn’t just happen because somebody has a good idea. It requires a champion, known as a sponsor, who is a member of Congress, either a congressman or a senator. It also requires a lot of support, supporters known as co-sponsors, also members of Congress. The original sponsor and all co-sponsors are collectively known as the sponsors.

Congressional committees

Not every member of Congress is interested in all aspects of government. They each tend to have areas of special interest or even actual expertise. Members participate in their areas of interest by way of committees. Each committee has a charter or area of interest or responsibility.

  1. Drafting and approval of legislation in their area of responsibility.
  2. Oversight of the departments and agencies within their area of responsibility.
  3. Investigation into issues related to their area of responsibility

Committee staff

Members of Congress may have a strong interest in some area, but they hardly have the time or energy or resources to delve as deeply as is required in our complex world, society, and government. This is where committee staff come in.

Member staff

Each member of Congress has their own office staff who may also cover areas of interest to their member, but this would be in addition to the specialized responsibility of committee staff.

Congressional hearings

Congressional hearings are a very mixed bag. They can certainly be an opportunity for an exchange of views on an issue or proposed legislation, but sometimes become ideologically-charged partisan witch hunts.

Congressional hearing witnesses

Congressional hearings usually involve a series of voluntary witnesses, each anxious to present their side of the story for the matter at hand. Even the most prestigious experts (and celebrities as well) vie for such opportunities for exposure to influence such weighty matters.

Subpoenas

Sometimes the most appropriate witnesses for a matter under congressional review are very unwilling to appear before the requesting committee. In such situations the committee can issue a subpoena which legally compels the witness to appear before the committee.

Who writes the laws?

Congressmen and senators rarely write laws themselves. Drafting of legislation is delegated to committee staff, who are professional employees of the most relevant committees who have expertise in drafting legislation and consult with subject matter experts for any needed technical details.

Elements shared between the executive and legislature

  • The budget — both the executive and the legislature must agree on the budget for any given year (subject to the veto override of the legislature in extreme cases.) Regardless of what the executive and legislature may want and agree on doing, executive agencies will not have money to spend until it has been both authorized and appropriated in the budget.
  • Revenue — the legislation can authorize the collection of revenue, such as through taxes, tariffs, and fees, and it is up to the executive administrative agencies to perform that collection, with the IRS being the primary agency for revenue collection.
  • Money — commerce and operation of the government requires a stable form of money to enable transactions of goods and services. The Federal Reserve effectively controls the money available in the U.S. The Federal Reserve is chartered by Congress, but the executive controls appointments to the Board of Governors, albeit with consent of Congress required.

Most aspects of government are completely dependent on financial resources, money, and most of that money comes from taxes levied on the people. Some money comes from tariffs and fees, but most comes from taxes, namely income tax.

Allocation of resources

Resources, primarily in the form of money from revenues, is allocated via the annual budgeting process in which both the executive and legislative branches participate.

Commissions

Both the President and Congress have the authority to create independent advisory commissions, typically to pursue policy matters or for the purpose of investigation. These commissions are strictly limited to an investigative and advisory capacity. The can issue recommendations and reports, but they have no legal authority or executive or administrative power, although they may be granted subpoena power to compel testimony.

  • 9/11
  • WMD
  • Intelligence
  • BP oil spill
  • Warren (JFK)
  • Social Security

Planning

Planning for future activities of government is shared between the executive and legislative branches.

  • Vision of what is to be achieved
  • Specific objectives
  • Strategy for how to achieve those objectives
  • How much it will cost
  • Who is to pay for it, how, and over what period of time

Implementation

Once Congress has agreed in principle and provided all of the necessary legislation for any planned activities of government, it is left to the administration to arrange for the implementation of that legislation. Congress will then maintain oversight on both the initial implementation and ongoing operations.

Oversight

Relevant congressional committees provide oversight for the implementation of activities authorized by legislation. This may include periodic briefings, congressional hearings, and reports. The annual budget cycle is an additional opportunity to examine government activities. On occasion, more formal and thorough investigations may also be performed in response to specific events, issues, or concerns.

Impact of judiciary on the law

In addition to merely enforcing statutory law, courts can effectively make law by creatively interpreting nuances of meaning in both statutory law and the Constitution.

Case law

Beyond the literal word of the law as enacted by Congress, each federal circuit court can adopt its own interpretation of the law, and then the Supreme Court may or may not provide its own interpretation of the law on top of the circuit interpretations.

Common law

Common law is another name for case law, as is stare decisis.

Treaties

Treaties are a special form of law in the form of agreements between countries, obligating each country to act in a specified manner.

Impact of the executive on the law

Regardless of what Congress intended and how the courts interpret laws, it is up to the executive branch, nominally through the FBI and Department of Justice to actually enforce the law.

Administrative law

Although Congress may create laws which create agencies and mandate regulations, it is the executive branch itself which must create the mandated regulations, which are also known as administrative law, in the form of the Code of Federal Regulation (CFR), which is distinct from the United States Code (U.S.C.)

Decisions vs. actions

Most of the operation of government is composed of a very deliberative process so that the details and consequences of most actions or activities must be carefully considered before a decision can be made formally official and the actual action or activity begun.

Rulemaking for regulations

Although some decisions are effectively executive-level edicts, such as presidential directives, most decisions that have an impact on the public will come in the form of regulations, also known as rules.

Personnel

Individuals in government will be either:

  • Elected officials
  • Appointed officials and staff
  • Career staff — civil servants
  • Members of the armed services
  • Contractor staff — employees of businesses performing services to the government under contract

Authority

Government has a wide variety of roles within society as a whole. Each role is comprised of some number of discrete activities, either actions that government can take or requirements on the actions of the public. Each such role or activity requires authority on the part of government.

Officials

An official is anyone within government who has some form of authority over one or more activities within or outside of government.

Senior officials

Senior officials are officials at the higher levels of government, especially those who oversee the activities of other officials. In some cases a senior official may not oversee other officials and merely provide some particularly special skill of direct interest to the highest levels of government.

  • Deputies
  • Under secretaries
  • Assistant secretaries
  • Deputy assistant secretaries
  • Directors

Hierarchy

Although we like to think of a modern democracy as a flat, classless social system with everyone equal and peers without any special status, and that is somewhat true at the level of individuals, citizens, and the electorate, but once we start talking about organizing people for specific purposes, such as government and its agencies, as well as business and even social organizations, hierarchy and pecking order quickly leap to the fore.

Administration

Although the executive branch does indeed perform an executive function, with the President leading the country, its primary and day to day function is primarily administrative in nature. In fact, the executive branch, sometimes known as the White House, is commonly referred to as “the administration.”

Lawyers

Much of what transpires in government has a heavy legal component or involves detailed, law-like rules, so it is no surprise that government involves a lot of lawyers.

Ideology

There is no single intellectual model for exactly what role a government should play in society, nor for how a given role should be implemented. Each such model constitutes an ideology, a belief system.

Common cause

There can be many ideologies. In fact, each individual can have their own distinctive ideology, although it usually turns out that a lot of narrower ideologies are simply offshoots of a few basic core ideologies.

Political process

Government may seem at times to be a relatively smoothly running machine (and sometimes not), but that is only a testament to the efficiency of the political process which continually refreshes the pool of officials and staff in government.

  • Free and fair elections
  • Candidates
  • Elective offices
  • Informed citizens
  • Voting
  • Political parties
  • Politicians
  • Political operatives
  • Political campaigns
  • Campaign finance
  • Political speech

Political Party

A political party can be formed once a critical mass of individuals rally around a common cause.

Political party committee

Each political party is an organization represented by a committee, a political party committee, composed of individuals who created the party or have been chosen by members of the committee. In the U.S., we have the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and Republican National Committee (RNC) as well as other, smaller party committees.

Political action committee (PAC)

In addition to arguing for candidates and issues on their own as individuals, individuals can also form special-purpose committees called political action committees or PACs which can independently raise funds and in turn, as an organization, make campaign donations to individual candidates and engage in collective political speech in favor of various candidates and issues, all at an arms-length from those donating to the PAC.

Political skills

Each element of government relates to specific organizational functions and tasks, and nominally requires a variety of skills. The nominal skills and activities of actual government have little to do with political skill per se, but political skill is required to accede to positions of power and responsibility in government. In other words, political acumen is required to get elected or appointed by someone who gets elected.

Politicians

Politicians are individuals aspiring to positions of power and responsibility who possess political skills.

Elections

An election is simply the process of selecting which individuals will be elected to each available elective office. Granted, there is a lot of logistics required to accomplish an election.

Free and fair elections

Elections are nominally a relatively mechanical logistical, accounting, and reporting process, but that’s only in theory. Ideally, an election should be free and fair. Many are not, or require extraordinary effort to make them free and fair.

  1. The mechanics of logistically running a smooth election.
  2. Interference or manipulation by individuals and groups seeking to distort the results.
  • Long lines
  • Too few staff, machines, supplies
  • Broken equipment
  • Too short hours
  • Complex or confusing ballots
  • Difficult identification requirements
  • Difficult to get to polling locations
  • Difficulty registering
  • Lost or misplaced ballots
  • Bribing staff
  • Bribing voters
  • Threatening staff
  • Threatening voters
  • Fake voters
  • Discarding or misplacing ballots
  • Fake ballots
  • Tampering with equipment, lighting, or electricity
  • Artificially arranging for logistical problems

Elective office

An elective office is any office in government that can be filled only through election by the people. Granted, each office can be temporarily filled through other means if the office becomes vacant for any reason.

Political candidate

A political candidate is any politician or individual who seeks to occupy a designated elective office.

Political campaign

A political campaign is the effort expended by and on behalf of an individual political candidate in an effort to be elected or reelected to office.

Campaign finance

There is some significant concern about inappropriate influence of large amounts of money in the political system. Outright bribery is certainly illegal, but there is also the concern that large donations to political campaigns may constitute a quid quo pro which is effectively a bribe.

Political operatives

A lot of logistical support is needed to support a political campaign. Political operatives are the individuals driving a political campaign. They themselves are not politicians per se, but they nonetheless live and breathe every aspect of what constitutes the politicians that they support.

Political speech

Everyone within the country is entitled to freedom of speech. Political speech is especially protected and is based on content intended to relate to some aspect of government or governance, as opposed to speech about matters of no interest to government or governance.

Party nomination

Each country and potentially each political party will have its own particular process for how candidates are nominated for a given political party. At least in the U.S., this may involve:

  • Primary elections in political divisions of the country, such as the state, to determine the degree of support for each candidate.
  • Party conventions to finalize the selection of the nominees for the highest elective offices for the party, such as president and vice president, from the candidates who participated in the primary election process.

Party convention

For major elections, typically for the election of national leaders, a political party will typically have a convention, which is an opportunity for delegates from all of the districts in the nation to come together to finalize their choice of nominees for the general election, approve the party platform, and to generally seek unity of the party in preparation for the general election campaign in which their nominees will seek to prevail over the nominees of the competing political parties.

Party platform

Each political party will typically produce a manifesto which expresses the principles and objectives of the party. This party platform document will assist voters, helping them align their own principles and objectives with those of one of the political parties. The party platform document will typically be produced in preparation for the party convention. It will likely be voted on at the convention, but typically any disagreements will be worked out in advance so that the vote for the party platform is a pro forma activity at the convention itself.

General election

There may be many elections within a country, state, or locale for a variety of purposes. A general election is the main election to select the final winner for each elective office, as opposed to primary elections which select only the nominees for each party.

General election campaign

There will generally be two distinct campaigns for a given elected office, the first or primary election campaign to choose the nominees for each party, followed by a separate campaign, the general election campaign to select the final winner for each office.

Electoral college

Presidential elections in the U.S. have the added step of an electoral college election for president and vice president. When voters choose a candidate for president and vice president in the U.S., they are actually choosing the party for their state. The winning party in each state then selects electors to represent that state. The number of electors for each state is proportionally based on the most recent national census, which occurs every ten years. Electors are pledged to vote for their party’s nominee, but there is no obligation to do so. In practice, electors do indeed vote as pledged for the party nominee. The actual election of president and vice president occurs approximately a month after the general election itself. Congress must then officially ratify the election and declare the winners.

The effect of the electoral college system in the U.S. is that the president and vice president are not elected by a strictly popular vote, so it is very possible that a given candidate could win a plurality or even majority of the popular votes for the country, but another candidate could actually win a majority of the electoral votes.

Voting

Voting is the action of individual citizens as members of the electorate to directly participate in the election.

Informed voters, informed electorate

Society as a whole benefits from informed citizens. Government benefits from informed citizens as well.

Sentiment

Government officials are in an odd position — on the one hand they have great power over the people, but on the other hand they are critically dependent on the good will of the people.

Polls

Public opinion polls are a mixed bag — they do provide some measure of public sentiment towards individual politicians and positions on issues, but they are notoriously inaccurate and fickle. Sometimes they actually do accurately predict subsequent events, but all too frequently the opposite occurs.

Informal polling

Short of the tedious scientific sampling required for polls, officials, staff, politicians and political operatives also resort to more informal techniques, such as just directly talking to groups of people, asking and answering questions, and getting a rough feel for the overall mood on issues and personalities.

Online betting and prediction markets

Online betting web sites and so-called prediction markets provide two interesting alternatives to traditional polling for political elections. With betting, you know the better has a financial stake so it would seem like they have a strong incentive to be right, but that doesn’t really say anything about whether their opinion really is representative of the average voter. Prediction markets don’t have money at stake, but once again there is no sense of how representative of average voters they may be. Nonetheless, they both provide interesting data that is in more real time than traditional polling.

Stories

A dry recitation of facts is generally boring and unappealing to most people — they would must rather hear an interesting and compelling story that is formed based on those same dry facts.

  • Persuade people of the value of a policy
  • Give examples of problems that should be addressed
  • Persuade people that the government is addressing an issue
  • Persuade people of a danger
  • Persuade people of an opportunity
  • Calm people worried about a threat
  • Dispel irrational fear
  • Persaude a voter to vote for or against a candidate or ballot question

Narrative

Narrative is one or more levels of abstraction removed from both dry facts and compelling stories.

Partisan politics

A proposal for action in government is partisan if it seeks to pursue the ideology of only a specific political party.

Nonpartisan

A proposal for action in government is nonpartisan if it seeks to appeal to all parties or no party in particular.

Bipartisan

A proposal for action in government is bipartisan if the leaders of both main parties are vigorously in support of he action.

Crime

Human nature and larger populations conspire to thwart the values of even the best of societies, resulting in a significant incidence of criminal activity. Efforts can be made to reduce crime, but it will inevitably persist to some degree.

  • Reasonable social services and opportunities for productive pursuits that eliminate a lot of the economic drivers of crime
  • Deterrents to crime
  • Policing as a backstop to deterrents
  • Policing to detect crimes at an early stage before too much damage is done
  • Policing to catch crimes in progress
  • Investigation to catch perpetrators of crimes
  • Prosecution for crimes
  • Fines, penalties, incarceration, and other costs as punishment and deterrent for crimes
  • Restitution to compensate for loss, punish for the crime, and deter future crime
  • Rehabilitation to reduce potential for future crime

Criminal justice system

The criminal justice system has a special place in society and government since it is a force for deterrence of criminal behavior, enforcement of laws, and generally keeping the peace that can directly impact all members of society in their daily lives in their local communities and even their families in their homes.

  • Statutory laws
  • Law enforcement personnel, the police
  • Courts
  • Prosecutors
  • Citizens as jurors and witnesses, and as defendants
  • Jails
  • Prisons
  • Lawyers
  • Law firms
  • Media

Businesses, individuals, and nongovernmental organizations may at times be subject to a variety of legal procedures, including criminal law enforcement and civil lawsuits.

Due process

Any individual or organization subjected to a legal process has constitutionally-protected rights to due process, including a speedy trial.

Civil and criminal cases

Courts handle both criminal and civil cases.

Civil justice system and civil lawsuits

Private disputes that do not involve a crime can be addressed using the civil justice system, by filing a civil lawsuit. Judgments and settlements can provide the plaintiff with significant relief to compensate for the alleged harm or loss.

Civil lawsuit judgments

The whole point of a civil lawsuit is not to get someone fined or thrown in jail, but to receive compensation for harm or loss. If the judge or jury finds in favor of the plaintiff, the defendant will be required to provide the plaintiff with compensation based on both actual harm and actual costs, and possibly even a punitive penalty to deter the defendant and others from committing the same or similar offense in the future.

Civil lawsuit settlements

Due to uncertainty of the final judgment in a civil lawsuit, the plaintiff and defendant frequently decide to agree on a settlement, a compromise, that gives them both part of what they seek but without exposing themselves to all of the risk of the final judgment. If the court finds against the plaintiff, they would get nothing, and if the court finds against the defendant the damages could be far greater than any proposed settlement amount. Even if one side believes they have a very strong case, judges and juries can be notoriously fickle and unpredictable. Most people go for the easy win rather than rolling the dice for the big win.

Federal and state courts

Both criminal and civil cases can be pursued in either state or federal courts.

Federal cases

Federal courts focus a combination of three types of cases:

  • Those that have a national scope.
  • Special circumstances, such as bank robbery, securities laws, drug trafficking, and terrorism.
  • Civil rights violations, which historically have been problematic at the state and local level in some regions of the country.

Local cases

State courts tend to focus on cases of a local nature, not crossing state boundaries, or involving violations of federal law.

Prosecution

Prosecution is the pursuit of a government charge of criminal behavior against one or more individuals in the court system, federal or state.

Adversarial system

Court trials are based on the adversarial system, by design, where each side has a champion, an advocate, who focuses all of their energy on solely their one side.

Appeal process

The appeal process is intended to counteract any lingering bias that may creep into the adversarial system, due to bias, inattention, laziness, or incompetence on the part of the two advocates, the judge, or the jury.

The economy

Nominally, business, industry, and commerce in the private sector are the heart of the economy of a country. But government impacts the economy in a number of ways:

  • Regulations.
  • Money — created by the government and controlled by the Federal Reserve.
  • Government is the largest consumer of many goods and services.
  • Government contracts with many vendors in the private sector which in turn consume many goods and services from other businesses in the private sector.
  • Government employees consume private sector goods and services.
  • Social Security and other financial transfers enable many individuals to consume private sector goods and services.

Transfers

Government has the ability to redistribute wealth and income within the economy through transfer payments, or simply transfers. Social Security, veterans benefits, and various welfare programs are some of the major examples. Subsidies are another, such as tax incentives to install solar panels or to buy electric cars.

Checks and balances

The three main branches of government have the ability to monitor and if necessary challenge the activities of the other branches.

Sovereignty

Rather than being a kingdom with a single sovereign leader who rules all and whose every word is the law, most modern democracies recognize sovereignty at three levels:

  • The sovereignty of the people — the government and its leaders serve at the pleasure of the people. All power of government flows from the people.
  • Sovereignty of the states — a country such as the Unites States is a federation of the states, each state retaining most of its own sovereignty even as they concede an enumeration of sovereign powers to the national or federal government
  • The national government as sovereign — although the people retain ultimate sovereignty, the national government is granted sovereign powers, as described in this paper, with the understanding that the rights of the people, sovereign and otherwise, will be respected

The press, media, journalists

Media outlets, traditionally known as the press, serves several distinct roles related to government:

  • Help government educate the people about important issues, laws, policies, and programs
  • Help people understand what is really going on in government
  • Investigate and disclose aspects of government operations that people may find shocking or offensive, or even be outright illegal
  • Advocate for policy options and change in government

Leaks and whistle-blowers

Technically, a leak is thought of as a bad thing, a failure of the system, but in reality most leaks are intentional, although still highlighting how problematic communication between government and the public can be.

Off the record comments

Sometimes it is politically risky for an official to publicly make a statement and have it attributed to themselves. They can secure agreement with the reporter that the statement is being made off the record, on background, and not for attribution, or attributed as an unnamed official or unnamed senior official.

The people

Although we don’t normally consider average citizens to be part of the government, they really are. Not only do average citizens vote to elect candidates to the executive and legislative branches, but maybe more importantly, fear or anticipation of how they might vote in the next election is a major if not primary motivator for the President and members of Congress.

The public

Public is a somewhat ambiguous term. Generally, in the context of a discussion of government, the public is anybody or any organization outside of the government itself. That would includes businesses as well as average citizens. In some contexts, the public excludes most organizations, especially establishment organizations, and is limited to individual citizens and possibly civil society organizations. In other contexts, the public really is simply the people, or a synonym for the same.

Person

Generally a person is simply an individual, who may or may not be a citizen. The U.S. Constitution uses the term person, unless citizenship is required.

Citizens

Government does confer the special status of citizen on natural born and naturalized individuals. Citizens have rights and responsibilities not accorded to non-citizens, but generally citizens are simply the people.

Private citizens

Private citizens are those citizens who do not serve in government in some official capacity, such as being an elected official or representative, an appointed official, or government staff position with some significant level of responsibility or authority. They have no authority or responsibility for any decision or activity of government.

  • Military service
  • Law enforcement
  • Non-management government employees
  • Service on jury duty

Electorate

The electorate is the subset of citizens who are eligible to vote, which would exclude youth, felons, and those judged not mentally competent.

Voter

Every member of the electorate is a potential voter, but until they step into the ballot booth and deposit their ballot in the ballot box they are not a voter.

Indigenous peoples, tribes, and nations

Countries such as the United States, Canada, Mexico, and Australia also have indigenous peoples, such as Native American tribes, and the Aboriginals of Australia who have hybrid rights, a combination of the rights of citizens of the country and their tribal rights.

Officials

Officials are individuals who occupy positions of power and responsibility in government for the purpose of leading, organizing, or delivering a service within government or to the public.

Elected officials

Elected officials are government officials who achieve their power and responsibility as a result of election by the people, the electorate.

Appointed officials

Lesser government officials may be appointed rather than elected. They tend to be chosen for their professional merit and technical competence rather than their mere electoral popularity, but political patronage frequently plays a role as well.

Elected representatives

Elected representatives represent the interests of their constituents in government. They create and vote on legislation on behalf of their constituents. Senators, congressmen, and their state and local counterparts are elected representatives.

Constituents

The individual who reside in a geographic area, such as a state, district, or locale, that is represented by an elected representative are the constituents of that area and representative. They may or may not be citizens. They may or may not be part of the electorate. It is their residence that makes them a constituent.

Transparency

Generally, all information about all aspects of government should be publicly accessible unless there is some special sensitivity issue involved. This includes all planning processes, decisions, actions, operations, reviews, reports, and investigations.

  • National security
  • Personnel records
  • Personal or sensitive information collected as part of investigations of private sector entities (businesses, individuals, organizations)
  • Negotiations
  • Diplomatic discussions
  • Internal discussions and deliberations

Public records

To the extent possible and reasonable, all transactions that the government is party to, both within government and between government and the public, should be recorded in a manner that is publicly accessible. Income tax returns and payments are an obvious exception.

FOIA requests

The Freedom of Information Act, FOIA, empowers organizations and even individuals to submit formal requests to gain access to information and documents held by the government which is not directly accessible by the public, assuring a significant level of government transparency. Journalists commonly use FOIA requests to gain access to what is considered sensitive information. It is not uncommon for significant portions of the requested documents to be redacted or blacked out so that the document can be released even though the redacted information cannot be released.

Privacy

Generally, government should request and retain as little information as possible on the public, individuals, businesses, and organizations, except when information is needed for legitimate government operations, identification, and investigation of criminal and civil matters.

Secrets

Privacy entitles one or more individuals to keep secrets, even from the government, unless the government can show a compelling state interest.

Encryption

There is an ongoing debate in society as to whether individuals are permitted to use data encryption methods which cannot be cracked by the government. There is no clear answer at this time. On the one hand, people have a right to privacy, but on the other hand the government has an obligation to protect the rights and interests of all members of society. Courts traditionally performed the balancing of the two, but modern technology has the ability to prevent courts from intervening.

Confidentiality

Confidences come in two forms, both made under the commitment to not share information with others:

  • Information shared between individuals.
  • Information made available to organizations or professionals.

Secrecy

In contrast with private life where privacy has primacy and secrecy is to be respected, secrecy in governance must be treated with great care. Generally, transparency must be the rule in government, but secrecy comes into play with:

  • Sensitive discussions over personnel matters, where the individuals retain their privacy rights.
  • Negotiations, where posturing is a key requirement to maintain an advantage.
  • Matters of national security.
  • Law enforcement activity where criminal behavior is suspected or under investigation.
  • Internal records and communications, including memorandums and email messages, reflecting sensitive internal discussions or deliberations within a department or agency, with foreign governments, or with state and local governments.
  • Protection of trade secrets when that protected information might become known to the government as part of an investigation, inspection, or other inquiry or activity.
  • Protection of the privacy of individuals when private information becomes known to government officials or staff as a side effect of some government activity.

Classified material

Many and maybe even most documents and information within government is readily available to members of the public. Official internal records, documents, and communications and deliberations are not normally accessible to the public. Information, documents, or other materials that are not intended to be made available to the public will be marked or otherwise categorized as classified material.

Leaks

Sensitive, confidential, and even classified materials and information may at times be prematurely made available to the public, for one or more of several reasons:

  • Whistle-blower innocently seeking to correct a mistake or failure of government policy or decision-making.
  • Traitor deliberately seeking to harm society.
  • Intentional and official leaks of information to influence public perception and opinion.

Espionage

Governments spy on each other, each trying to gain an advantage on the other and each seeking to disadvantage the other, but efforts by other governments to engage in espionage are viewed in a very negative and asymmetric manner. Spying is treason. Spying comes in four main forms:

  • A foreigner masquerading as a citizen, seeking classified material for transfer to another country.
  • A citizen seeking financial gain from the sale of classified material to another country.
  • A politically motivated citizen giving classified material to another country for non-financial, political reasons.
  • A socially or politically motivated citizen disclosing classified material publicly for non-financial, social or political reasons.

Human nature

We would like to imagine government as being one of the highest forms of human intellect and selfless thought and action, but human nature is not so easily set aside.

Trust

No matter how sophisticated the structure of government nor how competent the individuals running it nor how great the promises made by that government, there will always be the question of trust. Not even the best government can stand for long or be very effective except to the degree of trust that the public has in that government.

Confidence

Regardless of the degree of trust people have in the government, the real question is what level of confidence in government is inspired, to what extent do people believe that government will have their backs in terms of:

  • Protection from invasion and in times of war
  • Protection from natural disasters
  • Protection from criminal acts, including fraud
  • Fair treatment under the law
  • Equal access to opportunity
  • Public health
  • Sound economy
  • Protection and respect for rights

Dysfunctional human nature

For all of their good qualities, people, groups, and organizations can also act in ways that are counter to a sense of goodness and the common good of society as a whole. Such social animus manifests itself in many forms, such as:

  • Fearful
  • Spiteful, envious, jealous, resentful
  • Selfish
  • Fear-mongering
  • Incitement, baiting, fighting words
  • Unforgiving
  • Distrustful
  • Paranoid
  • Regionalism
  • Group-centric thinking and behavior
  • Bias
  • Harassment
  • Criminal behavior that has social animus rather than economics as its primary motivation
  • To specific individuals
  • Self-harm to the dysfunctional individual or group themselves
  • To a specific group of individuals
  • To entire organizations
  • To entire segments of society
  • To entire strata of society
  • To government and its ability to provide various services
  • To all of society

Participation

There are many different ways for individuals to participate in government:

  • Vote as a citizen
  • Run for office
  • Be appointed to office
  • Apply for a civil service position
  • Join the military
  • Supply goods or services to government as a vendor
  • Pay your taxes
  • Utilize services provided by the government
  • Contact government officials or representatives with questions or issues to be addressed
  • Lobby government on issues
  • Sign a petition
  • Volunteer
  • Donate money
  • Donate land
  • File a formal complaint
  • File a law suit
  • Protest

Elements of influence

Beyond the actual elements of government that have actual responsibility and power, influence on those elements is also itself an element of government. What are the elements of influence?

  • The electorate — the citizens, the voters, constituents, who influence government by their ability to grant or withhold their votes based on issues, policy choices, confidence, and personalities of elected officials.
  • Direct feedback from citizens — letters, phone calls, emails, social media expressions directed from citizens to any of the elements of government, with congressional representatives as a traditional favored target, since they tend to be the most responsive and closest to their constituents.
  • The elite — influential individuals, typically of wealth or social position who are positioned to influence both government and the rest of society independent of whether they have specific experience relevant to the matter at hand. They may rely of selected experts or their own opinion and life experience.
  • Experts— professionals and academics who have specific expertise in matters of interest to government.
  • Celebrities — individuals whose popular appeal enables them to influence popular opinion and enables them to gain access to government forums such as congressional hearings and spokesperson opportunities.
  • The media — through editorials, opinion pieces, and their general ability to influence the electorate and other elements of influence.
  • Commentators — individuals with strong opinions that may carry weight either with government officials, staff, or the public.
  • Lobbyists — anyone who directly appeals to government officials and staff, although a small fraction of them are specially designated as registered lobbyists as their primary function when interacting with government.
  • Money — bribery itself is illegal, but money has many ways to indirectly influence government decisions and operations.
  • Think tanks — write papers and hold public forums to analyze and advocate for issues, positions, and alternatives.
  • Interest groups — express opinions on issues of interest to specific constituent groups.
  • Civil society — a general reference to any non-governmental organization (NGO) seeking to influence government policy decisions and operations.
  • Activists — individuals or members of groups whose primary focus is advocating for matters that tend to be considered counter to the interests of the establishment
  • Protesters — activists or other individuals who engage in public protest to draw attention to matters which they feel are not being given sufficient attention by the government or the mainstream media.
  • Counterprotesters — individuals who are supportive of government on matters for which protesters are in opposition.
  • Trade groups — organizations representing the interests of specific industries, economic sectors, or groups of businesses.
  • Polls — an indirect and approximate measure of sentiment on issues.
  • Facts — statistics, observations, and scientific measurements that can weigh on decisions and operations.
  • Arguments — specific lines of reasoning presented as if fact to sway opinion of either those inside government or those seeking to influence government.
  • Petitions, referendums, and initiatives — can sway or direct government decisions and allocation of resources, primarily at the state and local level.

Referendums

At least at the state level, citizen-initiated referendums, initiatives, are a practical way for people to directly influence governance.

Petitions

Petitions have value at the local level and as symbolic gestures, but national government is now too large and complex for them to work well at all.

Order

People tend to be more successful and content to the degree that there is a reasonable degree of order in their communities. Government is a primary vehicle for achieving and maintaining order.

Justice

People need justice to feel that they have a secure place in society. Justice tends to respect order, but occasionally the two do get out of sync, possibly because times change and the preferred model of justice has moved faster than the underlying social order.

Social justice

It is important for all segments of society to have equal access to all elements of society, including government.

Stability

The public depends on the stability of government in their daily lives. People need to know where they stand and what role government will have in their lives. People want the trains to run on time.

Change

As with nature, government may evolve slowly with minor changes or on rare occasions with big, radical leaps. Radical change is not out of the question, but must be considered carefully since the consequences could be far-reaching and unlikely to be readily apparent in advance.

Reform

Changes to government are usually packaged as reform. Many reforms are merely proposed reforms, while only occasionally does a reform package actually become accepted and successfully and fully implemented. Even if accepted, authorized, and money is appropriated, many reforms fail to deliver the results that were originally envisioned by the reformers. Sometimes a reform works as literally specified, but falls short of expectations of the reformers or their supporters. Revision or rollback is then called for. Sometimes it takes a series of failed or mediocre attempts before a reform package truly takes root and blossoms.

Disruptive change

The system has many processes in place to effect real change, but sometimes that is not enough for some people, who don’t feel the system is being responsive, and that the system itself is the problem rather than enabling solutions and change. Various forms of disruption may then be pursued in pursuit of change, such as:

  • Revolution
  • Insurrection
  • Rebellion
  • Unrest
  • Uprising
  • Riot
  • Protest, demonstrations, rallies
  • Civil disobedience
  • Disorder
  • Disruption
  • Civil war

Revolution

Revolution is the ultimate change in government, through violent force, but of course should only be even contemplated if circumstances are truly drastic.

Rebellion

Short of outright revolution, rebellion is the use of force to force changes in the established governmental order or to simply refuse to comply with demands of the government.

Insurrection

Insurrection is the traditional term for what we call rebellion today. The U.S. Constitution refers to both, as if synonyms.

Uprising

An uprising is generally the same as insurrection and rebellion, but more extreme than mere unrest.

Repression

A dysfunctional government in a dysfunctional society is likely to be faced with significant unrest which leads to disorder and disruption, or worse. Government has an obligation to maintain order, but there is a very real risk that efforts to quell unrest, disorder, and disruption may be too extreme and disproportional, and have the effect of repressing normal dissent and rights to speech, press, assembly, and association.

Unrest

Short of outright rebellion or revolution, civil unrest is an option as well. To be clear, government has an obligation to put down insurrection, rebellion, and violent or disruptive unrest, such as rioting, so unrest is usually an unwise choice as well, especially since the color of violence has a very good chance of severely muting any actual message of request for change.

Protest, demonstration, and rallies

It is not uncommon for generally negative sentiment concerning some aspect of society or policy of government to arise. The goal should be to deter it from spiraling out of control into outright, violent unrest. It may simply be all talk, even shouting, or may evolve into peaceful protests, demonstrations, and rallies or other so-called actions, preferably peaceful.

Civil disobedience

Civil disobedience is a time-honored tradition, but is still a violation of law, distinguishing it from protest, demonstration, and rallies which can be accomplished fully within the law.

Disruption

Actions become illegal when they cross the line and devolve into some level of force, either disruptive of the daily lives of people or interfere with operation of government or outright violence.

Disorder

Any kind of disruption has the potential to result in disorder that puts social stability at risk.

Riot

Passion and anger can quickly take over in situations of disorder, resulting in an escalation into violence, such as throwing of objects, fighting, beatings, breaking of windows, looting, fires, and general destruction of property.

Chaos

Disorder does occur on occasion, maybe more commonly as a result of natural disaster or accident, but usually local government is able to relatively quickly restore order. This is not necessarily always the case. All levels of government must be prepared for the possibility that disorder will quickly spin out of control and devolve into uncontrollable chaos.

Civil war

Revolution and rebellion are conflicts between the people and the government. Civil war is a conflict between distinct groups of people in the same country, at a national level.

Coup

A coup is the sudden seizing of power in a country through other than lawful democratic means (elections and lawful appointments.) Frequently violent, but there can be so-called bloodless coups.

Regime change

Regime change is a change in political power within a country by one or more foreign countries either by direct invasion or through indirect, even democratic means, possibly by influencing and aiding groups using resources and support from outside the country, as well as support for and coordination of nongovernmental organizations.

Invasion

On occasion, one country may seek to invade another. This is an act of war. This causes a massive diversion of resources in both government and society as a whole. It may also cause a suspension of rights, to the extent needed for the country to cope with the invasion.

War

Invasion is one reason for a country to be at a state of war. The country could also be involved in a military conflict in another country, but not suffer an invasion into its own borders.

Conflict

Conflict can occur at many levels, from individual citizens to entire countries.

Deterrence

The threat or promise of retribution or retaliation is frequently sufficient to deter other parties from engaging in undesirable actions.

Social restrictions

Although a free and open society is the desired goal, there are occasions or circumstances in which a variety of restrictions might be instituted and enforced, beyond bans on criminal activity, not all of which are necessarily desirable, such as:

  • Prohibition of libel
  • Prohibition of slander
  • Prohibition of incitement and fighting words
  • Public decency restrictions for speech, dress, and behavior
  • Prohibition of sexual relations with minors
  • Prohibition of disclosure of confidential, trade secret, or classified information
  • Outright censorship based on content
  • Access restrictions for security or to avoid unrest
  • Curfews in circumstances of unrest
  • Marshal law in circumstances of outright chaos

Majority

A major objective of government is to prevent small groups from gaining outsize power and commandeering society or government in a way that is grossly disproportionate to their numbers. Granted, leadership and elite experts are to be valued, but a clear goal is to assure that the majority rules.

Dominant political party

A healthy society will have more than one political party. The existence of multiple parties is effectively a check on excess by a single party. The major parties will tend to exchange power, one being dominant for some stretch of time, until the people decide that they have a greater need for whatever the other party has to offer and give them a majority in an election cycle. The dominant party will have the opportunity to refashion government to more closely align it with their own ideology. Over time, as the various parties jockey for and switch control, the alternation of ideologies will tend to average between the ideologies, producing a more moderate government than if only a single party dominated.

Opposition party

When one party dominates, the other party or parties function as the opposition. They may seek to thwart the policy changes of the dominant party, but they may also have the effect of moderating the policies of the dominant party. At a minimum, the opposition party will keep the flame of their party and its ideology alive, pending the inevitable transition to switch from the current dominant party to the current opposition party becoming the new dominant party.

Faction

The founding fathers of America had grave concerns about the ability of motivated small groups or factions to effectively seize control of government. Majority rule is one way to assure that their concerns are not realized.

Consensus

A straight simple majority or even a super-majority is frequently insufficient to achieve a level of buy-in to lead to tranquility. A true consensus of 100% agreement is not commonly achievable, but a general consensus is a reasonable objective.

Compromise

A common technique to achieve consensus is to water down the proposal so that even if the proponents are a little disappointed not to get everything they wanted, at least the original opponents can feel that they can live with the compromise proposal.

Tyranny of the majority

The flip side of factions is the prospect that a zealous majority could refrain from respecting the rights of minority groups. This is a thorny problem, but the system does at least acknowledge the importance of the majority respecting minorities.

Benign communication

A fair amount of the communication from government is strictly benign and informative:

  • Office hours
  • Fees
  • Directions
  • Instructions
  • Requirements

Propaganda

On occasion, either due to national emergencies or political motivation, particular government communications may cross the line from being strictly benign to outright propaganda, particularly when it becomes:

  • Biased
  • Misleading
  • Promotes a particular point of view
  • Promotes a particular political cause
  • Defames some segment of society

Advocacy

In between benign communication and propaganda is government communications which simply encourages or discourages designated activities, nominally for some nonpolitical purpose, such as:

  • Saving money
  • Eating nutritious food
  • Defining nutritious food
  • Conserving water during a drought
  • Conserving electricity during a heat wave
  • Buying energy-efficient appliances and vehicles

Entitlement programs

Some government services are free for the asking, some require payment of fees, and some are entitlement programs where the service (which may be in the form on a monetary payment) is available as the result of the recipient being a member of a specified class or category. The major entitlement programs are:

  • Social Security — accrue based on income earned
  • Medicare/Medicaid — as a result of age
  • Welfare programs — as the result of limited income
  • Veterans benefits — as the result of military service

Dependence

Every member of society has at least some dependence on government, even if it be only national security and law enforcement.

Independence

It is not the goal of government for everyone in society to be completely dependent on government. Individuals and their families, businesses, and other organizations are intended to be independent and free to pursue their interests and goals without the permission or interference of government, unless government can show that it has a compelling interest for the common welfare of society as a whole.

Compelling state interest

The general standard for whether government should be involved in some activity or attempted to regulate, prohibit, or compel some action on the part of the public is whether the government has a compelling state interest, such as:

  • To protect the people from harm
  • To protect the rights of the people
  • To play a role in society that has been assigned to government by the people (Constitution)
  • To maintain the integrity of the government so that it may continue to serve those interests

Progress

Founding father Thomas Jefferson spoke of progress of the human mind and the need for our institutions, including government, to progress as we and the world around us evolve.

Consensus

Consensus is generally a good thing, but not always easily reachable or even reachable with great effort. Nonetheless, it is a great goal to always have.

Compromise

Some degree of compromise is commonly needed in order to achieve at least an approximation of consensus.

Status quo

Accepting the current state of affairs in society, the status quo, can be a double-edged sword, sometimes allowing a stable society to thrive, while delaying needed change at other times, leading to social decline or unrest. Society, its leaders, and its members are constantly walking a tightrope, always agonizing over whether the status quo is currently a good thing or a bad thing.

History

The track of progress over time constitutes the history of a country and a people.

Tradition

Some aspects of history are so compelling that we feel compelled to repeat them or at least pay homage to them, whether through special holidays, events, programs, education, or other ways of ingraining them in our national values.

Immigration

Immigration is nominally more of a social issue, the decision of individuals to move around as their natural rights permit them, but government does have a compelling state interest to assure that the numbers of individuals flowing into the country does not exceed the available resources to support them, as well as to assure that society is protected from undesirable elements, mainly criminals.

Immigrants

America is famously billed as a nation of immigrants — everybody (besides Native Americans) is either an immigrant or descended by no more than a few generations from immigrants.

Guest workers

Individuals and their families sometimes come to the U.S. solely for temporary economic purposes, with the intent to eventually return to their former abode.

Visas

Whether immigrating or merely visiting, a document called a visa is required. The State Department has several categories for visas:

  • Tourism, visit
  • Business
  • Employment
  • Study, exchange
  • Immigration

Undocumented immigrants

Undocumented or illegal immigrants are an unresolved social, legal, and government issue. Arguments can be made on all sides as to what their true status should be, with a current focus on the possibility of providing a pathway to citizenship despite their lack of proper, official documentation.

Refugees

Some immigrants come here as the result of calm, reflective thought and decision as to whether they specifically want to make America their home and would have been otherwise content to remain in their former abode, but others are more anxiously urgent to come to America as a refuge from extreme turmoil in their former abode.

  • Natural disasters
  • Economic depression
  • Social repression and discrimination, social persecution
  • Political repression and political threat to their well-being, political persecution
  • General social upheaval
  • War
  • Race
  • Religion
  • Nationality
  • Membership in a particular social group
  • Political opinion

Diplomacy and international relations

Relations between countries, international relations, are managed via diplomacy and diplomatic affairs. There are protocols for each of the many forms of interactions between countries. The simplest are arrangements for common business transactions and travel between countries. Visits and interactions between corresponding officials of the countries are the common forms of diplomacy. Consultations during times of stress are among the most important form of diplomacy, attempting to resolve differences without resorting to more draconian measures.

Human rights record

Each country has a reputation for the extent to which they both formally recognize and actually respect human rights. This reputation is publicly known as their human rights record, and also includes public knowledge of any human rights abuses within that country.

Responsibility

The essence of government is to assure that somebody somewhere is responsible for all aspects of society that individuals, their families, their communities, and businesses and other organizations depend on in their daily lives, and in emergency situations as well.

Scapegoats and witch hunts

Regardless of how clear governmental responsibilities are, there will be times when there is confusion about precisely who is responsible. Ultimately, the public will remain unsatisfied until responsibility can be assigned for every incident or issue.

Patronage

Modern governments are supposed to focus on a combination of the will of the people and merit and technical competence, but human nature being what it is, it is not uncommon for individuals and vendors to be selected based on who knows who rather than who knows what.

Incompetence

Government officials occasionally fail to perform their duties in a fully professional manner not because of intent or simple negligence but because they simply lack the technical competence needed to perform those duties. No law is broken and there is no overt corruption. There is an aphorism known as Hanlon’s razor which goes something like “Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by carelessness.”

Misconduct

Misconduct is when government officials willfully and intentionally fail to perform their duties in a fully professional manner. The misconduct may only occasionally rise to the level of criminal behavior, but is certainly grounds for dismissal, demotion, or other correctional action.

Corruption

One would expect most modern governments to be free from corruption, but sadly that is not the truth.

Scandals

Outright criminal activity and outright corruption are clearly covered by the law, but scandalous behavior by government officials can sometimes skirt the law or flout the law.

Ethics

Ethical beliefs and standards of conduct are a general issue in society as a whole, but are especially important in government since so many people are so dependent on government. Standards of conduct in government come on five fronts:

  • Ethical standards that individuals bring with them from their own lives, their families, and their communities.
  • Professional ethical standards for the career profession of the individual.
  • General ethical standards for society as a whole, reinforced by families, religious institutions, schools, and communities, as well as civil society.
  • Tailored ethical standards and practices for the specific area of government.
  • The thorny problem of dealing with foreign officials whose ethical standards may be significantly mismatched with our own.

Conflict of interest

An ongoing problem in government is officials and staff acting with conflicts of interest, meaning that they, relatives, friends, or entities that they may seek favors from in the future have something to gain if they decide or act in a certain way, as opposed to simply deciding and acting solely on the merits of the matter before them. These are not situations where the official specifically sought out a situation with a conflict, which would be a more clear case of corruption, but situations where it merely happened to align with their interests as a result of the independent choices of other officials or an act of Congress, or where there was no other choice.

  • Perceived conflict of interest
  • Potential conflict of interest
  • Possible conflict of interest
  • Actual conflict of interest
  • Action in self-interest

Food production

Food is a special category of good since it is such an essential requirement for human life with little room for discretion. The private sector generally does a reasonable job of producing food. Government gets involved in a variety of ways, such as:

  • Aid during droughts
  • Water management
  • Price subsidy, when needed
  • Paying farmers not to grow when there is a glut
  • Research
  • Promotion of better techniques and technologies
  • Food safety regulation
  • Nutrition recommendations

Water distribution

Water is another special category of good and service since it is an absolute essential requirement for life, both for people and for the plant and animal life needed by society.

Energy production

Energy is another special category of good or service since it is such an essential requirement for modern life. The private sector does a reasonable job of producing energy, primarily electric energy and fuels used to produce energy. Government gets involved in a variety of ways, such as:

  • Research and development of new energy sources.
  • Advocacy for energy conservation.
  • Promotion of better techniques and technologies.
  • Regulation, especially for consumer pricing.
  • Actual production in special situations, such as TVA and Bonneville Power Administration.

Housing

Housing is another of the special categories of goods and services that are an essential requirement for modern life. Once again, the private sector does a reasonable job of producing homes for people, whether houses or apartments or other group settings. Government gets involved in various ways, such as:

  • Regulation and setting standards for building construction.
  • Subsidy for low-income families.
  • Public housing for low-income families.
  • Mortgage financing to supplement the private sector.

Redistribution

Redistribution refers to social programs of government taking a fraction of income or wealth from individuals and distributing that money to more needy individuals, either as cash, credit, or free services available only to those in their category of need.

Limits of government

This is no clear consensus as to where the limits really are for government. Valid questions include:

  • What are the proper roles of government? Who should decide?
  • How far can government go?
  • How large can government grow?
  • What is the optimal size of government?
  • Should government be larger, broader, or deeper?
  • Should current government be expanded?
  • Can current government be expanded?
  • Should government include all aspects of society?
  • Should more federal power be delegated to the states?
  • Should the federal government assume more state powers?
  • How much surveillance can the government engage in, when, and with what controls?
  • How secure should the borders be?
  • How open or closed should immigration be?

Religion

Freedom of religion is a cornerstone of modern, western-style countries, recognized by government as a right.

Civil Society

A separate paper will delve into civil society and its role in both government and society overall.

Nongovernmental organizations

A nongovernmental organization (NGO) is technically any organization that is not directly affiliated with government, but the common use is to refer to voluntary, nonprofit organizations that advocate with government, particularly for changes in government policies or to advocate for the interests of underserved segments of society.

Authoritarianism

Thankfully, one of the hallmarks of modern, western-style democracies is their lack of strict authoritarian control. There may be a dominant party for extended periods, but frequent elections and constant power plays, coupled with term limits, virtually assure a constant turnover in personal power.

Polarization

Even in the best of modern, western-style democracies there can be a distinct lack of unity and tendency for many people to gather at one or the other of extremes. Thankfully, these frequent bouts of extreme polarization tend to fade away as demographics shift, people age, young people flow into the system, and pressures that may have forced the polarization in the first place moderate, but even so, as rapidly as one polarizing influence declines, another begins to rise. Polarization remains an ongoing problem in government, possibly a permanent feature.

Ideologues

Ideology is simply a belief system. Everybody has one. Or to be more accurate, everybody participates in any number of belief systems. An ideology may be rather mild and tame, or it may have a strict and fiercely dogmatic character, or anywhere on that spectrum. Belief in an ideology is rarely a problem per se, but an extreme and strident obsession with an ideology, known as being an ideologue, can be quite problematic.

Tribalism

Integration and common ground are hallmarks of modern, western-style government, while tribalism is a throwback to more primitive societies. Communities and families are important in modern society, but the basic idea is that before the law and government all communities and families are equals, not that one is better than another or that one’s own community or family that should have special treatment or power in government.

Nationalism

As with tribalism, extreme nationalism is evidence of dysfunction rather than a positive norm in modern government. Each country has its own particular society and sense of pride, and some may be better than others in various ways, but the global order is based on all countries, peoples, societies, and governments being treated and treating each other as equals rather than individual countries or societies believing and acting as though they are superior to all the rest.

Xenophobia

Human nature leads people to be simultaneously hospitable to and wary of strangers, people who are different, from a different culture, country, or society. Some amount of wariness is frequently warranted, but taken to the extreme, intense or irrational fear, dislike, and loathing of people from other countries — xenophobia — are dysfunctional and certainly not a positive norm in modern, western-style society and have no place in the policies of their governments.

Crises

Most of government concerns unexceptional day to day activities. Many conflicts are normal and to be expected and have established processes baked into the nominal organizational structure. But on occasion some event or condition occurs that is so way out of normal that established governmental processes are not able to cope with the situation. These are crises.

  • Exceptional natural disaster
  • Exceptional financial scandal
  • Exceptional economic malaise
  • Invasion, war
  • Exceptional disease outbreak
  • Pervasive criminal activity
  • Exceptional social upheaval
  • Exceptional conflict between levels or branches of government

Peacekeeping

Government may become involved in international efforts to maintain peace in regions of outright or potential conflict. This may involve sending the country’s own troops in on a peacekeeping mission, or it may involve seeking and arranging for one or more third party countries to provide neutral troops to keep the peace.

Sanctions

A sanction is the penalty that is threatened for a violation of a law, regulation or rule. The purpose of the sanction or penalty is both to punish the offender for the offense and as a deterrent to discourage others from violating the law, regulation, or rule elsewhere or in the future.

Surveillance

One problematic aspect of security is surveillance. Modern, western-style democracy places a high value on the right to privacy. Modern, intrusive surveillance is increasingly bumping up against privacy.

  • Visual observation
  • Video cameras
  • Traffic cameras
  • Wire taps of phones
  • Monitoring email traffic
  • Eavesdropping
  • Informants
  • Sifting through trash
  • Thermal imaging of residential areas
  • Data mining

Touch points

The point of elaborating the elements of government to this level of detail is to identify the many touch points that civil society, as well as business, other nongovernmental organizations, and the people in general, can have for interacting with and influencing the decisions, policies, operations, and actions of government. Their government.