Breaking the Administrative State Key to a Successful Second Term				 			 									  						President Trump, the great red pill for American society, has  finally brought to the surface what has been simmering beneath for over a  century.
  By  Ned Ryun  September 23, 2020 amgreatness.com
  Lost  in the shuffle of this week’s breaking news is something Attorney  General Bill Barr said last week in a speech calling out the dangers of  the bureaucracy, even within his own department.
   Eric Tucker of the Associated Press  outlined the “issue” with Barr’s  speech at Hillsdale College:  “Rejecting the notion that prosecutors should have final say in cases  that they bring, Barr described them instead as part of the ‘permanent  bureaucracy’ and suggested they need to be supervised, and even reined  in, by politically appointed leaders accountable to the president and  Congress.”
   Yes. That is precisely the problem.  Yet what we identify as the problem was in fact the goal for the  Progressives who established our present-day bureaucracy. 
   Read the writings of Woodrow Wilson  to understand the Progressive ideal. It is this: to have a massive  bureaucracy, an administrative state, filled with unelected, educated  elites who would help accelerate “progress” in America. 
   Wilson was very clear about what he envisioned. Scholar Ronald Pestritto  writes that Wilson advocated “a  new kind of national administration—largely removed from popular  consent and charged with making the policy requisite for national  progress—that could be staffed by university men like himself, as  opposed to the political operators of low character who populated the  back rooms of Congress.”
   This is the essence of the  administrative state: an unelected elite bureaucracy drawn (supposedly)  from the “smartest of the smart” institutions that will make all the  actual policy while being largely removed from “popular consent,” i.e.  electoral accountability. In other words, it’s a way to get you and your deplorable opinions out of the way. 
   What Barr hit upon is not a glitch of  the Progressives’ administrative state, it is the central feature. It  was always intended to work this way. 
   The problem with the administrative  state approach is that eventually a large and powerful bureaucracy, with  little real oversight from elected officials, and no electoral  accountability by virtue of which the American people can remove them,  thinks that it is in charge. It thinks that it decides all important  questions that it can wield its power however it damn well pleases. And  isn’t that the case in practice even though they never legitimately overturned the Constitution’s assertion of the sovereignty of the people?
   This is the great tension that has  exploded to the surface in the last four years when one Donald J. Trump  showed up in D.C. in 2017 saying, essentially, “I’m the duly-elected  president of the United States, by the means laid out in the  Constitution. I make the decisions about foreign and domestic policy  inside of my administration and how the laws will be carried out.” 
   In response, the administrative state  actors said: “We don’t think so. We think we’re the ones who should  make those decisions.” 
   All of this madness, from Russian  collusion fairytales to Ukrainian quid pro quo hoaxes, revolves around  one question: Who decides? In a constitutional republic, all power flows  from the people to their duly elected  leaders to entrust them with deciding, whereas in an administrative  state, it is the unelected bureaucrats who decide. This tension was  bound to have to play out in dramatic fashion.
   So Trump, the great red pill for  American society, has finally brought to the surface what has been  simmering below it for over a century: you cannot have an administrative  state governing philosophy at the same time you pretend to be devoted  to the Constitution as it was written. They are oil and  water—conflicting approaches to government and its role in peoples’  lives. 
   No republic can thrive, or even  merely exist, when substantial numbers of powerful people believe that  bureaucrats in various bloated government departments and agencies have  the moral right to make decisions on the behalf of the American people  who never voted for them. What kind of a republic is that? 
   It’s a joke.
   This should be a priority in Trump’s  second term: If he truly wants to drain the swamp, he needs to break  apart the administrative state, the foundation of the swamp, by 10  percent a year—at a minimum. It is the only way to reaffirm and  reestablish the idea that the people of this republic are sovereign.  Break the state, drain the swamp, restore the Republic. |