Episode
The American Federal Civil Service: A History
- Podcast
- ChinaTalk
- Published
- Apr 1, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 3502
- Processing state
processed- Canonical source
- https://pscrb.fm/rss/p/traffic.megaphone.fm/CHTAL4417042169.mp3
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/chinatalk-418044/episodes/the-american-federal-civil-service-a-history/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/chinatalk-418044/the-american-federal-civil-service-a-history.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
The history of the American federal civil service — what can we learn from its past glories and failures, and where should we take this next? We have Kevin Hawickhorst of the Foundation for American Innovation to discuss: The Pendleton Act myth — Why civil service reform didn’t begin or end with Pendleton, and why starting the story there misses what actually made the system work. The rise of the subject-matter state — How early 20th-century agencies staffed with real experts — entomologists, engineers, agronomists — made the U.S. bureaucracy arguably the most capable in the world. From expertise to org charts — How mid-century functional reorganization hollowed out mission-driven agencies and replaced subject knowledge with process management. What competence delivered — From agricultural breakthroughs to infrastructure build-out, what a serious, technically grounded civil service was able to accomplish. Whether we can rebuild — DOGE, the abundance movement, state capacity, and why this might be the best time in decades to make the government work again. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices