Whether you love or loathe your political federal boss, he or she won't be around much longer. Senior Correspondent Mike Causey says regardless of who wins the ...
During the 8 years of a two-term presidency, most career federal workers have the joy/slash heartache of serving under a number of political bosses. Cabinet heads come and go. And the typical political appointee, according to some estimates, lasts about 18 months. Some are great, some are awful.
Sometimes the relatively short-time politicos move on to better things. Sometimes they leave in quiet (they hope) disgrace. But they leave. At least for a time.
Regardless of whether Democrats hold on to the White House, or the next POTUS is a Republican, your odds of working for a recent or a current political boss in 2017 are slim. But …
There is a much better chance that you may encounter or hear through the grapevine that The Departed is back in government. Maybe at another agency. The difference is that in their second-time-around mode they appear as humble, low-profile civil servants who have laundered themselves and emerged as regular folk.
The plan for the political-to-career feds is to work long enough to qualify for a lifetime inflation-indexed annuity, and the federal health program where the government pays roughly 70 percent of the premium. Many people initially take political jobs to punch their ticket and flesh-out their resumes. They use contacts made while in government to get good private sector jobs, often in the field or sector they monitored as feds.
But lots of hardened career civil servants think they’ve seen it all, and continue to watch for resurrected politicals
For many years “burrowing” into the career civil service was a popular survival technique among politicals. Especially as the days of a given administration were numbered. Although nobody knows the actual numbers, some, maybe many, got caught when honest, or revenge-seeking, career employees ratted out their former bosses to Congress or the media. The Office of Personnel Management started making a big deal out of orderly transitions, and monitoring attempts to burrow into the civil service. The result they have made it difficult, but definitely not impossible, to leave a political job, launder oneself with some inside help and return to life as a career civil servant someplace else.
In the past, many long-time feds know or heard of politicals who shed their skin and went to ground. Some managed to have long — often successful — careers, then retire as civil servants years later.
Whether that can still happen — and will happen this time — remains to be seen. Remember these are usually very smart people. With connections. The Office of Personnel Management has its anti-burrowing regulations out.
But lots of hardened career feds who have seen it all wonder if burrowing is a thing of the past. They will continue to watch for resurrected politicals. The rule of thumb, one survivor veteran is “if you see something, say something.”
By Michael O’Connell
The movie “Groundhog Day” was filmed in Woodstock, Illinois.
Source: IMDB
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Mike Causey is senior correspondent for Federal News Network and writes his daily Federal Report column on federal employees’ pay, benefits and retirement.
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