Overview
Fred Malek grew up near Chicago and won an appointment to
West Point. Following a tour as an airborne ranger officer
with the Special Forces in Vietnam, he spent two years in
business before coming to Washington as Deputy Under Secretary
of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. In 1970
he became Special Assistant to President Nixon, where he
was responsible for recruiting for cabinet-level positions,
commissions and boards. He later served as Deputy Director
of the Office and Management and Budget and then Member of
the White House Domestic Council, before leaving government
service in 1975 to join the Marriott Corporation. There he
rose to become President of Marriott Hotels and Resorts when
he moved on to become President and Co-CEO, and later Chairman,
of Northwest Airlines. During the 1990s, he founded Thayer
Capital Partners, a finance and investment firm, and serves
as a director of several corporations. Malek remained active
in Republican political circles and served in advisory roles
in both the Reagan and Bush administrations. His book, Washington's
Hidden Tragedy, the Failure to Make Government Work, stemmed
from his leadership of an effort to improve government management.
About the Transcript
In a brief interview, Fred Malek describes his role in hiring
Barbara Hackman Franklin, a Harvard Business School classmate,
as Special Assistant at the White House to lead the effort
to recruit women for top positions in federal government. He
characterizes the results as exceeding his expectations, and
he reflects on why President Nixon took on this challenge and
how the effort was viewed by senior staff in the White House.
Malek sees the success of the program as demonstrating that
it is possible to accomplish a significant objective in government
with a dedicated effort, the right people, a systematic approach,
and accountability.