Frederick Lawton
Frederick Joseph Lawton (November 11, 1900 – November 16, 1975) was an American
bureaucrat who served as the ninth
Director of the
Bureau of the Budget. Lawton was born in Washington, D.C., and became a lawyer and an accountant. He spent most of his professional career working with the government
bureaucracy. He helped President
Franklin D. Roosevelt wager with members of Congress to support the
Fair Labor Standards Act. He first joined the
Office of Management and Budget as an
executive assistant in 1935. He also served as an adviser to Congress. In 1947, he became an
administrative assistant to President
Harry S. Truman. He was appointed to the post of Director of the Bureau of the Budget in 1950, and held the position until 1953. President
Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed Lawton to a term on the
United States Civil Service Commission after he left the Bureau; he served from 1953 to 1963.
His economic policy consisted of making budget cuts among various departments of the federal government. One of his primary contributions was in helping to re-design the
Bureau of Internal Revenue, action which led to the creation of the
Internal Revenue Service. Lawton advocated a civil service, rather than a
patronage system for tax agents. He opposed a number of plans in Congress, including a
fair trade bill and attempts to
decentralize the federal offices in Washington, D.C., to other areas of the country.
Provided by Wikipedia