AP Government: The Bureaucracy and Executive Agencies
How federal agencies implement laws and shape public policy
AP Government: The Bureaucracy and Executive Agencies
How federal agencies implement laws and shape public policy
Social Studies - Grade 9-12
- 1
Define bureaucracy in the context of the federal government. Explain why bureaucracies are necessary in a modern national government.
Think about agencies such as the Department of Education, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Social Security Administration.
A bureaucracy is a system of departments, agencies, and offices that carries out laws and administers public policy. Bureaucracies are necessary because Congress and the president cannot personally manage all of the detailed work required to run programs, enforce rules, collect data, and provide services. - 2
Distinguish between a cabinet department and an independent executive agency. Give one example of each.
A cabinet department is a major executive branch organization led by a secretary who is part of the president's cabinet, such as the Department of State. An independent executive agency is outside the cabinet structure but still performs executive functions, such as NASA. - 3
Explain the difference between implementation and rulemaking in the work of federal agencies.
Implementation is about carrying out a law, while rulemaking is about writing the detailed rules.
Implementation is the process of putting laws into action by creating programs, distributing funds, or enforcing requirements. Rulemaking is the process agencies use to create specific regulations that explain how a broad law will be applied in real situations. - 4
Congress passes a clean water law that says factories may not release harmful waste into rivers. The Environmental Protection Agency then sets exact limits for specific chemicals. Identify the bureaucratic power being used and explain your answer.
The agency is using rulemaking authority. Congress created the broad legal goal, and the Environmental Protection Agency wrote specific regulations that define what factories may and may not release into rivers. - 5
What is discretionary authority? Explain why Congress often gives discretionary authority to bureaucratic agencies.
The word discretionary means the agency has some room to decide how to act.
Discretionary authority is the power given to agencies to make choices about how to implement laws. Congress often gives this authority because laws can be broad, technical, or complicated, and agencies have specialized expertise to make detailed decisions. - 6
Describe the merit system and explain how it differs from the spoils system.
The merit system hires and promotes government employees based on qualifications, exam results, experience, and performance. The spoils system gives government jobs to political supporters, friends, or allies after an election. The merit system is meant to make the bureaucracy more professional and less partisan. - 7
Explain the significance of the Pendleton Civil Service Act in the development of the federal bureaucracy.
Connect the law to hiring based on ability rather than political favors.
The Pendleton Civil Service Act helped replace the spoils system with a merit-based civil service. It made some federal jobs depend on qualifications rather than political loyalty, which increased professionalism and reduced patronage in the bureaucracy. - 8
Identify one way the president can influence the federal bureaucracy and explain how it works.
The president can influence the federal bureaucracy by appointing agency heads and cabinet secretaries. These leaders can guide agency priorities, manage staff, and help carry out the president's policy goals. - 9
Identify two ways Congress can oversee or control the federal bureaucracy. Explain how each method creates accountability.
Think about money and investigations.
Congress can control the bureaucracy through appropriations, which means it can increase, decrease, or limit agency funding. Congress can also hold oversight hearings, where agency officials must testify and explain their actions. Both methods create accountability because agencies must answer to elected lawmakers. - 10
What is an iron triangle? Identify the three groups involved and explain how they can influence policy.
The triangle links lawmakers, agencies, and organized interests.
An iron triangle is a close relationship among a congressional committee, a bureaucratic agency, and an interest group. The agency gains support and information, the committee gains political support and expertise, and the interest group gains access to policymaking. - 11
Compare an iron triangle with an issue network. Explain one key difference.
An iron triangle is usually a stable and close relationship among three main actors: an agency, a congressional committee, and an interest group. An issue network is broader and more fluid, including many participants such as experts, journalists, advocacy groups, courts, and members of Congress. - 12
A president orders an agency to focus more on border enforcement, but Congress has already passed a law requiring the agency to process certain applications. Explain why bureaucratic agencies may face conflicting pressures.
Federal agencies are part of the executive branch, but Congress creates laws and controls funding.
Bureaucratic agencies may face conflicting pressures because they are influenced by both the president and Congress. The president directs executive priorities, while Congress writes laws, provides funding, and conducts oversight. Agencies must often balance these different sources of authority. - 13
Explain how federal courts can limit or check the actions of bureaucratic agencies.
Federal courts can review agency actions to determine whether they follow the Constitution, federal statutes, and required procedures. If an agency exceeds its legal authority or violates rights, a court can block or overturn the agency's action. - 14
Use the categories below to classify each example as a cabinet department, independent regulatory commission, government corporation, or independent executive agency: Department of Defense, Federal Reserve Board, United States Postal Service, and NASA.
Look for clues in the purpose of each organization: defense leadership, regulation, businesslike service, or specialized executive work.
The Department of Defense is a cabinet department. The Federal Reserve Board is an independent regulatory commission. The United States Postal Service is a government corporation. NASA is an independent executive agency. - 15
A federal agency proposes a new regulation, allows public comments, revises the rule, and then publishes the final version. Explain why this process matters for democratic accountability.
Consider why transparency and public input are important in a democracy.
This process matters because it gives the public, interest groups, experts, and affected businesses a chance to respond before a rule becomes final. Public notice and comment can make agency decisions more transparent, informed, and accountable.