He Cannot, Moreover, Understand How The Duties
Can Be Conducted, Seeing That Men Must Be Called On To Resign Their
Places As Soon As They Have Learned To Make Themselves Useful.
And,
finally, he is lost in amazement as he contemplates this barefaced
prostitution of the public employ to the vilest purposes of
political manoeuvring.
With us also patronage has been used for
political purposes, and to some small extent is still so used. We
have not yet sufficiently recognized the fact that in selecting a
public servant nothing should be regarded but the advantage of the
service for which he is to be employed. But we never, in the lowest
times of our political corruption, ventured to throw over the
question of service altogether, and to declare publicly that the one
and only result to be obtained by government employment was
political support. In the States, political corruption has become
so much a matter of course that no American seems to be struck with
the fact that the whole system is a system of robbery.
From sheer necessity some of the old hands are kept on when these
changes are made. Were this not done, the work would come
absolutely to a dead lock. But as it is, it may be imagined how
difficult it must be for men to carry through any improvements in a
great department, when they have entered an office under such a
system, and are liable to be expelled under the same. It is greatly
to the praise of those who have been allowed to grow old in the
service that so much has been done. No men, however, are more apt
at such work than Americans, or more able to exert themselves at
their posts. They are not idle. Independently of any question of
remuneration, they are not indifferent to the well-being of the work
they have in hand. They are good public servants, unless corruption
come in their way.
While speaking on the subject of patronage, I cannot but allude to
two appointments which had been made by political interest, and with
the circumstances of which I became acquainted. In both instances a
good place had been given to a gentleman by the incoming President -
not in return for political support, but from motives of private
friendship - either his own friendship or that of some mutual friend.
In both instances I heard the selection spoken of with the warmest
praise, as though a noble act had been done in the selection of a
private friend instead of a political partisan. And yet in each
case a man was appointed who knew nothing of his work; who, from age
and circumstances, was not likely to become acquainted with his
work; who, by his appointment, kept out of the place those who did
understand the work, and had earned a right to promotion by so
understanding it. Two worthy gentlemen - for they were both worthy -
were pensioned on the government for a term of years under a false
pretense.
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