By NEIL A. LEWIS
WASHINGTON - Brenda Benton, a veteran media relations employee with the Los Angeles Police Department, is now part of a record-breaking political phenomenon.
Ms.Benton was so thrilled with the election of Barack Obama as president that she has become one of about 300,000 people who have, so far, put themselves forward for posts in the new administration. At the equivalent time in the George W.Bush transition eight years ago, with his election still in dispute, there were about 44,000 applicants, according to Clay Johnson, who led the Bush transition effort. Mr.Johnson said the final figure was about 90,000.
In 1968, President-elect Richard M.Nixon’s aides were so uncertain about the availability and willingness of people to take administration jobs that they sent more than 70,000 letters to everyone listed in Who’s Who in America, a reference guide, seeking potential federal appointees.
But that is surely not a problem at Obama transition headquarters in Washington, where more than 50 staff aides have been busily classifying and downloading resumes into a computer system that lists applicants’ special skills and, one official said, what notable political sponsors they might have.
The excitement about an Obama administration along with the cyclical pent-up eagerness of Democrats denied the employment bounty of the executive branch for eight years has fueled the surge, although the unraveling economy may be adding its own boost.
The presidential historian Michael R.Beschloss said that “it’s hard to find a parallel in modern times to this degree of enthusiasm for going into government,” all the more striking in a period previously known for cynicism about government employment.
Ms.Benton, an African- American who is wellknown in Los Angeles political circles, said she would love to work in some way for the future first lady, Michelle Obama, because she is greatly impressed “with her style and the dignified way she handles situations.”Ms.Benton has sent her resume to www.change.gov, the transition clearinghouse, and has begun thinking about who she knows who could put in a recommendation.
Obama officials have said they might have more than double their current number of applications by Inauguration Day.“There are a lot of people who want to work in the administration,” David Axelrod, a senior Obama aide, exulted to reporters recently.“That’s great. That’s great for the country.”
But not necessarily great for the job seekers because there are actually only about 3,300 positions an incoming administration gets to fill. That means that despite the appealing notion of hordes of eager newcomers swarming to change Washington, the vast majority of those seeking jobs will be disappointed.
Mr.Johnson, who is now deputy director for management at the Office and Management and Budget, said most people were stunned to learn that the percentage of politically appointed employees in the federal government is so small, a mere 0.17 percent of the civilian work force of 1.9 million.
One route for applicants is to begin with an elected Democratic official. Aides to Senator Charles E.Schumer of New York said they had, so far, about 100 requests to forward expressions of interest in jobs at all levels of government. Mr.Schumer himself added another explanation for the flood of job seekers: Democrats, he said, are more likely to believe in the power of government to improve things.
The‘‘Plum Book’’lists the job openings in the new presidential
administration. But applicants far outnumber available positions./PHOTOGRAPHS BY BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
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