Control of the bureaucracy through legislative oversight is a matter of exercising the legislative veto and its spending authority.
The federal bureaucracy is huge: roughly 2.6 million employees, plus many freelance contractors. Everybody in the bureaucracy works to administer the law. For the most part, the executive branch manages the federal bureaucracy. Although the executive branch controls the majority of the federal bureaucracy, the legislative and judiciary branches also have some influence. Congress, for example, controls the Library of Congress, the Congressional Research Service, and the Government Accountability Office, among other bureaucracies. Through its power of oversight, Congress also monitors the federal bureaucracy to make sure that it acts properly. The courts sometimes get involved in the bureaucracy when issues of law and constitutionality arise, such as when a civil service regulation is violated or if an agency oversteps its jurisdiction. There are five types of organizations in the federal bureaucracy: Cabinet departments Independent executive agencies Independent regulatory agencies Government corporations Presidential commissions
the president
the president
They are involved in the planning, design and oversight of the building's construction.
Bureaucracy refers to a large group of people who are involved in running a government but who are not elected
A president ( any president) is not involved with committees. This is the realm of the legislative branch.
the president
The legislative branch of the US federal government, and of the US state governments, decide on taxes.
The United States government is involved with more than three-quarters of the cases brought before federal court.
Insurance regulation involves a number of stakeholders. Insurance companies are directly involved. Legislative authorities will also take part on the regulation in ensuring that the regulation will be mutually beneficial.
They are frequently critical because they think that big government is the cause of all of their problems, and that it only invades their lives without solving their problems. But the idea that the private sector works better is completely far fetched. Because the private sector is focused on profits as opposed to the actual outcome of an enterprise, they are not fit to provide governmental services to the people. A solution would be more oversight of spending and the enforcement of the Freedom of Information Act. The bureaucracy is always the most inefficient and most costly way to get any task performed. If they privatized and allowed people to compete for profit in pretty much all cases waste/cost/redunencies would be reduced. Bureaucracy is the structure and set of regulations in place to control activity. It is represented by standardized procedure (rule-following), formal division of powers, hierarchy, and relationships. It lacks free thought and common sense. American bureaucracy puts its own comfort; convenience and longevity ahead of its mission could be called a bureaucracy. The American Heritage Dictionary' definition of bureaucracy reads in part: "numerous offices and adherence to inflexible rules of operation; any unwieldy administration." According to Webster's new world Dictionary of the American Language, "bureaucracy is governmental officialism or inflexible routine." Roget's Thesaurus gives equally demeaning synonyms for bureaucracy: "officialism", "officiousness", and "red tape". It needs to be reduced. Government should reduce their size by 1/2. They are too involved in daily life and need to leave that to state and local governments. Some of the ways that bills are voted on and passed needs to be changed. Americans are expecting to receive more benefits from the government and it is the reason why they are criticizing the bureaucracy.
Judicial review is there to ensure that both the executive and legislative branches stay within the limits of their power and don't try to expand it in order to gain additional control over the government. Of course, politics are involved in all parts of government, and it doesn't always ensure that.