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Annual Message to Congress (1790): Request for a "Contingency" Fund

What impact do you think Washington鈥檚 experience as the commander of an army had on his request for a Secret Service Fund? How important do you think it was that this request came from George Washington in terms of its approval by Congress? How did a request like this enhance presidential control of foreign policy?

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Introduction

With all due respect to Parson Weems (1759鈥1825), George Washington鈥檚 first biographer, the president did know how to tell a lie, and he was ruthless in his pursuit of intelligence, urging his agents to 鈥渓eave no stone unturned鈥 in their operations against the British. General Washington鈥檚 successful use of intelligence and deception during the Revolutionary War led President Washington to conclude that the new executive office needed a fund at its disposal to handle the 鈥渂usiness of intelligence,鈥 as John Jay referred to it. Washington believed intelligence operations were the exclusive province of the executive, a hard-earned lesson taken from the inability of the Continental Congress to protect secrets.

In his First Annual Message to Congress, Washington requested a contingency fund, or as some members of Congress preferred to call it, a 鈥淪ecret Service鈥 Fund. The fund would be controlled by the president and would allow the chief executive to authorize foreign policy missions free from congressional oversight. The president鈥檚 request was approved by Congress in 1790, with the support of Representative James Madison, and with it Washington was granted the authority to avoid the usual reporting procedures mandated by Congress. The president was in essence given a blank check to conduct secret operations that he alone deemed to be in the national interest.

—Stephen F. Knott

George Washington, George Washington Papers, series 2, Letterbooks 1754鈥1799: Letterbook 25, April 6, 1789鈥揗arch 4, 1791, Library of Congress, available at or .


鈥 The interests of the United States require that our intercourse with other nations should be facilitated by such provisions as will enable me to fulfill my duty in that respect in the manner which circumstances may render most conducive to the public good, and to this end that the compensation to be made to the persons who may be employed should, according to the nature of their appointments, be defined by law, and a competent fund designated for defraying the expenses incident to the conduct of foreign affairs鈥.

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