State of the Union
I had an epiphany after writing the first draft of this book. It goes back to an earlier book, Smart Data, Enterprise Performance Optimization Strategy, (c) 2010 Wiley Publishing. In that work, Dr. Rodger and I advocated the creation of a “U.S. President's Performance Management Dashboard.” The dashboard would provide performance metrics, aggregated from all of the programs and service initiatives under the Departments and Agencies of government such that the President and Congress can see metrics at any level that they desire. It is absurd that the federal government doesn't have such a thing already, but it doesn't.
If it did, then the State of the Union would be readily available for all to see at any point in time (in real time). The epiphany part is that the State of the Union report from Presidents is probably not delivered always at the right time. The U.S. Constitution is casual about it. "The formal basis for the State of the Union Address is from the U.S. Constitution: The President “shall from time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union, and recommend to their Consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient.” Article II, Section 3, Clause 1.
Historically, it has been an annual message, of a sort. Think about it. A new President arrives in January. Would it not have been useful to have a State of the Union report from a credible system having been delivered, say in the prior October, before the national election? That way voters can evaluate the past performance and understand the stepping stone to the next administration.
The US Federal government fiscal year is from October to September. The next government could be a continued incumbency for a second term. Or, it could be a new presidency. The dashboard and its metrics would be inherited for the next incumbent to assume control to produce new metrics. Having a standard system and approach would ensure continuity in accountability. That does not mean that the dashboard would not change. In fact, the contents would reflect the actions of the Executive branch and Congress at changing and amending legislation, funding, and schedules. Otherwise, it must be dynamic and accountable for real-time results.
A Presidential Dashboard as envisioned is a management tool for which the results are the U.S. Government Performance that should be available and accessible by Congress and the citizens with some caveats particular to national security. Unlike government audits that are review-mirror-facing, an executive management system must have forward planning and controls, including simulation and predictive performance capabilities. Embracing the idea that the federal government is an automated regulatory environment is a context for systems engineering.
Below is the Table of Contents and you should know that the author’s style is to share the research and discovery journey that ultimately leads to suggested solutions and actions. Reading party platforms and candidate manifestos as they are today is not reader-friendly. That is part of the problem. Some of the information includes long quotations that could be put into an appendix. Hiding that information would preclude your experience, as much as you can bear. What makes it difficult? Each party decides priorities and topics that are not reconciled and factually substantiated with citizens’ needs and wants. Much of the contents are philosophical and debatable. The conclusion is that the government remains off course from addressing essential services and requirements that are best expressed as outcomes.
Table of Contents
TOC Overview:
Chapter 1: Why a U.S. President Manifesto Standard?
Chapter 2: Where to Begin: U.S. Constitution
Chapter 3: A Good Life for All Citizens for an Entire Lifetime
Chapter 4: Constructing the Presidential Manifesto Outline
Chapter 5: The Government Bureaucracy and Constructing the
President’s Manifesto
Chapter 6: The U.S. Constitution and body of laws and regulations
Chapter 7: A Presidential Candidate’s Manifesto should be enduring
Chapter 8: How Should a Candidate Develop a Manifesto?
Chapter 9: Presidential Candidate Manifesto and Political Party
Platforms
Chapter 10: Draft of a Hypothetical Manifesto Based Upon
Democratic Candidates in Election 2016
10.1 Democratic Party Platform 2016
10.2 Obama
10.3 Brookings Institute
Chapter 11: Draft of a Hypothetical Manifesto Based Upon
Republican Candidates in Election 2016
11.1 Republican Party Platform 2016
11.2 Donald Trump
11.3 American Enterprise Institute
Chapter 12: The Federal Government Enterprise Model
Chapter 13: An Outline for a Presidential Candidate’s Manifesto
Chapter 14: The Role and Purpose of Political Parties
A President’s Manifesto
A model for how presidential candidates can tell their story
by James A. George (c) 2019 All Rights Reserved
If you want a free copy of my book, send an email to me: jimgeorgeauthorarchway@gmail.com. It comes in pdf and iBook.
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