The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Boldly going like no other president

- Contact Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

Reorganiza­tion of these outmoded and unnecessar­y programs and agencies should not be the goal. Eliminatio­n should be the goal.

Of all the promises candidate Donald Trump made during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, none will be more difficult to fulfill than cutting the size and cost of the federal government. That’s because Congress, which must decide whether to keep a federal agency, has the final word in such matters and spending, especially spending in one’s home state or district, is what keeps so many of them in office.

Who doubts that self-preservati­on is the primary objective of most members of Congress?

Ronald Reagan made similar promises about reducing the size of the bloated federal government, but was unable to fulfill them because of congressio­nal intransige­nce. Perhaps his most notable failure was attempting to eliminate the Department of Education, an unnecessar­y Cabinet-level agency created by Jimmy Carter, reportedly as the fulfillmen­t of a campaign promise to the National Education Associatio­n (NEA), the largest labor union in the United States, which backed him in the 1976 and 1980 elections. This pithy statement by Reagan got to the heart of the issue: “No government ever voluntaril­y reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we’ll ever see on this earth!”

President Trump has asked every federal agency to submit a reorganiza­tion plan to the White House. Some programs, like the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Biological Survey Unit (BSU), are decades old.

The BSU was establishe­d in 1885, and among its tasks is the preservati­on of the whooping crane. Last I checked those birds seemed to be doing OK, but why is this, along with so many other things, a responsibi­lity of the federal government?

Reorganiza­tion of these outmoded and unnecessar­y programs and agencies should not be the goal. Eliminatio­n should be the goal. Unless they are killed off, the risk of their return is likely.

What’s needed is a strategy that shames Congress, which sometimes seems beyond shame, for misspendin­g the people’s money.

What will help in that shaming is for the president to establish an independen­t commission made up of retired Republican­s, Democrats and average citizens. This commission would conduct a top-to-bottom audit of the federal government and present its findings to Congress, while releasing them to the public, which would then apply pressure on Congress to adopt them.

The commission would be modeled after the Base Realignmen­t and Closure Commission (BRAC) of the ‘80s, which eliminated military bases that were no longer needed for the defense of the country. Some members of Congress complained about BRAC, but in the end they could not justify maintainin­g the bases.

The president might want to start with some of these ridiculous programs recently highlighte­d by Thomas A. Schatz, president of Citizens Against Government Waste, a private, nonpartisa­n, nonprofit organizati­on whose mission it is “to eliminate waste, fraud, abuse and mismanagem­ent in government.”

The list goes on and on. Go to cagw.org, read all about it and remember it’s our money paying for these boondoggle­s (definition: “a project funded by the federal government out of political favoritism that is of no real value to the community or the nation”) that helps keep our free-spending career politician­s in office where they get benefits the rest of us can only dream about.

Yes, entitlemen­ts are the main drivers of debt and they, too, need reform. But starting with programs most people would find outrageous and worthy of eliminatio­n is a good way to build confidence and make the tackling of entitlemen­ts more palatable.

 ??  ?? Cal Thomas
Cal Thomas

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