The federalist

Firing Inefficient Bureaucrats: Top Priority for GOP President

“The administrative state,” Heritage Foundation President Dr. Kevin Roberts declared in front of the annual gathering of the World Economic Forum in⁤ Davos last week, “is ⁤the greatest threat to democracy in the‌ United States, and we need to end it.” He’s ‍absolutely right.

As conservatives, if we’re serious about re-constitutionalizing our⁣ system of government, the next administration must make slashing both the scope and scale of the executive branch — the citadel of the administrative state — its highest priority. If we fail in⁣ that objective, any and all wins we ‌secure the next time we win​ at the ‌ballot box will be erased by the next Democrat ​administration. It will happen immediately and by executive order and other ⁤means, as it did virtually on‌ the first day of the Biden administration.

Out of concern for second- ‍and third-order consequences, I’m typically wary to ​recommend “silver bullets” when it comes ‌to⁢ policies for addressing national issues. But I believe that chopping down the administrative state is as close to a swift and enduring fix as we’ll have for righting the ship of state.

Ruled by Regulation

Most Americans believe that legislation passed by Congress is what has screwed up our daily lives, from education to health care to the exorbitant price of gasoline to the outrageous cost of groceries. That’s not surprising, because we’re taught in ‍middle school⁤ and high school that the legislative branch makes the “laws” that govern the nation. Yet it’s even less surprising when you consider that public⁤ education is a government-run indoctrination cartel — one designed to mask‍ the reality⁤ of American government in the 21st century.

The reality is that ​laws don’t‍ rule our lives. Rules and regulations do, and they are practically devised out of whole cloth, implemented, and enforced ⁣by unelected bureaucrats in virtually countless departments and agencies within the executive branch. ​(I say countless because there’s no consensus as to the number of entities, but most estimate in the hundreds.) My wife and I served in the Trump⁢ administration. For almost two years, we witnessed with our own eyes the bureaucrats brazenly acting as a ⁤fourth branch​ of government, and an‌ essentially unaccountable one at that.

A skeptic might retort, “But they’re not ‘unaccountable.’” Yes, a president‍ is elected, and that individual oversees the 2.1 million bureaucrats in the executive branch. Plus, those bureaucrats — “the civil service” — are supposed to be apolitical. Well, they’re⁢ not. They took “hostile work environment”​ to some very weird places for⁣ President Trump’s appointees. What’s more, the president is only able to deploy ⁤between 7,000 and 9,000⁢ appointees across the ‍vast expanse of the executive branch.

What does this all mean? Alas, it means that presidential elections won ‍by ‌Republicans mean far less ​in ⁣terms of change. I wouldn’t go so far as to⁣ assert they‌ are “pointless,” but it’s certainly trending in that direction. I’ll put it another way. Democrats who capture the​ White House don’t “push on‍ an open door” regarding the administrative ‌state and advancing their ⁣agenda. There isn’t even a door within the frame. There are only gleeful bureaucrats on the other side waiting to provide hot-stone massages to the‍ commander in chief and his appointees. A Republican, however, who somehow manages to outsmart the deep ‌state and gain access to the White House will be pressing against a triple-bolted, plate-steel vault door reinforced by concrete.

This is a DEFCON 1-level crisis for our system of government, and, by extension,⁢ our way of life. ​Bureaucrats,‌ whether through the “interagency” or some other contrived mechanism,⁣ must no longer be able to fashion and effect policy independent of the president, the head of the branch in ​which they exist.

Abolish the Pendleton Act

Congress will never muster the will to abolish the Pendleton Act of 1883, which birthed the civil service. The Supreme Court, on the other hand, is now in a position to ⁤ limit the scope of or overturn Chevron ⁢deference,‌ which, through delegation to ⁢the executive‌ branch, ⁢has supercharged rulemaking at the direct⁣ expense of lawmaking for nearly 40 years. Regardless, on day one of the next Republican administration, the president has to be prepared to sign executive orders to​ defang, if not destroy, this fourth ⁤branch of government, which functions ‌in the shadows of the swamp and has managed to avoid genuine scrutiny ‌for decades.

A starting point would be the resurrection of⁣ Executive ​Order 13957, signed by President Trump on Oct. 21, 2020,​ and‍ revoked by President Biden on Jan. 22, 2021, which created a⁤ new category of federal‍ positions: Schedule F. Moving “policy-determining,⁤ policy-making, or policy-advocating” career employees into the category would have made them answerable to the president and thus more accountable to the American people.

On the presidential campaign trail, GOP candidates have spoken a lot about prospective policies pertaining to national security, energy, the economy, health care, education, and immigration. True, there have been⁢ calls to eliminate ‍departments and ‍agencies. Yet there has been too little discussion about comprehensively and systematically ‍neutralizing these entities by attacking their foundation: the Pendleton⁣ Act.

There’s been talk here and there over ‌the past few years of combatting the administrative state by cutting it up into pieces and shipping its⁤ parts out to different areas of the country. (“Let’s put the Department of ‌Agriculture​ in Iowa because it produces a lot ‌of‍ corn. Also, we could staff it with normal people who live out there.”)

This is ⁢wrongheaded. Virtually ⁣anything ⁤the government touches goes sideways. Once a government ⁤entity lands, corporations, universities, and nonprofits rush in to seal their lips to⁢ the spigot of federal ⁣dollars. The strategy seems to come straight out of the left’s playbook as the government always makes conservative⁣ areas less conservative. This is why Tallahassee, Florida’s ‍capital, is the bluest spot ‌in the Sunshine State, which is ‍otherwise markedly red.

Monitoring ⁢the⁤ Swamp

Along these lines, ‌President Trump ⁣ proclaimed on Truth Social that the⁣ new FBI building ⁤should be built neither in Virginia ‍nor Maryland but right in the same spot where it sits today. He argued that the FBI “should be involved in ⁢bringing back D.C., not running‍ away from it, ⁣especially the violent crime.” There’s an additional reason to keep our country’s “large and ⁢complex” enforcement agency based within ​the District of Columbia. D.C. isn’t a large place. It’s physically limited by the Potomac and Anacostia ⁤in the south and ​Maryland in the north. It’s much better to have the ‍administrative state contained in one place for ease of⁢ monitoring.

I want to‍ be clear. There is indeed a role for ‍civil servants who carry out the everyday tasks of government. That’s not at all to demean those tasks, let alone the people responsible for them. It’s merely to say those tasks are procedural. There should, however, be no​ role for civil servants who operate autonomously in the executive branch. There never should⁤ have been one in the first place. The ‍notion ⁢of a ⁢“professional” civil service that would ​be neutral was ⁣rooted from the outset in⁣ progressivism, specifically in an unadulterated faith in rationalism. It denies the intractable flaws of human nature. It’s also patently absurd according to Civics 101, not⁤ to mention a certain piece of parchment.

The mission of the next Republican president is ⁢straightforward:⁢ Make⁢ our government accord with the Constitution once more, and right away.


How can the⁤ Pendleton Act be addressed and⁢ what role does it play in the administrative ​state

⁣ Often considered a Republican stronghold.

Conclusion

If conservatives genuinely want to restore our constitutional system of government⁢ and protect the principles upon which our nation was founded, we must confront and ‍dismantle the administrative state. This⁤ shadowy fourth‌ branch⁣ of government,⁣ comprised ⁤of unelected bureaucrats who wield immense power and operate independent of the president, poses a ⁢grave ‍threat to our democracy. It is through this branch that countless rules and regulations, which often have a greater impact on our daily lives than legislation passed by Congress, are formulated and enforced.

To effectively address this threat, the next Republican administration⁤ must make it their highest priority to shrink the scope and scale of the executive branch. By slashing the power ⁤of unelected bureaucrats and ⁢reestablishing the authority of the ⁢president, we can begin to restore balance and accountability to our government. This will require decisive action, such as signing ⁤executive‍ orders to defang and dismantle‍ the administrative state.

Furthermore, we must also reconsider​ the Pendleton Act and its implications⁤ for the civil service.⁢ While it may be challenging to abolish this⁣ long-standing law, the Supreme Court could limit its scope and curtail ⁢the deference given to executive branch rulemaking. Additionally, resurrecting Executive Order 13957, which created a new category ‌of⁤ federal positions accountable to the president, would provide greater transparency and accountability.

To truly address the administrative state, we need ⁤a comprehensive and systematic approach. Merely relocating government entities or cutting them into pieces ​will not suffice.⁤ We ⁢must focus on attacking⁤ the root of the problem by neutralizing the Pendleton​ Act and reestablishing the authority of the⁣ president over the executive branch.

If we ‍fail to take strong‍ and decisive action⁣ against the administrative⁣ state,‌ any victories we achieve‍ at the ballot box will be ⁣quickly ⁣erased by the next Democrat ‌administration. This is a critical moment for the ⁢future of our ⁢democracy and our‍ way of life. It is ⁢time‍ for conservatives⁤ to unite in the fight against bureaucratic overreach and reclaim our ⁢constitutional system of government.

Only through dismantling the⁣ administrative state can we ensure that⁣ our laws are crafted by elected representatives accountable to the American people. It is⁣ the only way to restore true democracy and ‍protect the principles that have made ‌our nation great.



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