Friday, April 3, 2020

The Deconstruction of the Administrative State and the Trumpidemic2020©

 

Steve Bannon was one of the principals in the Trump presidential campaign. With Kelly Ann (Alternative Facts) Conway (formerly a pollster, which could account for why she is such a lousy front-person for Trump) Bannon came over from the Ted Cruz campaign when it ended. Cruz had been funded by the far-right winger Robert Mercer, who brought his money with him to Trump. (Among other things, Mercer was also a funder of Brexit and climate change denial.) Bannon brought with him his concept of "The Deconstruction of the Administrative State." This was his fancy term for destroying as much of the Federal bureaucracy as possible, given that those particular pieces of the bureaucracy for which he advocated destruction stood in the way, in any way, of private profit-making. In this he was following in the steps of one Grover Norquist, an advisor to George W. Bush, who famously said "our objective is to shrink the Federal government to the size of a bath-tub and then drown it in the bath-tub."

Of course the elements of the Federal government which Bannon/Norquist (and just about the whole of the Republican Party since the time of Newt Gingrich, a Norquist devotee) were/are such elements as the Environmental Protection Administration, elements of the Department of Agriculture aimed at corporate farming (and pollution), the Department of Labor in general, the National Labor Relations Board, the Department of Education in relation to religious schools and its poisonous relative home-schooling, and so on and so forth.

Of course, the anti-[certain-parts-of] Federal government policy is an important strain of Republican doctrine that goes back to the Presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes. It does not include such regulatory agencies at the Federal prison system, the Department of Homeland Security and its active anti-undocumented persons division, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and of course the Department of Defense. Even though Trump and his minions went full force into "Deconstruction," Bannon himself didn't last long. He was probably just too smart for Trump to have hanging around.

Among the collateral damage of "getting rid of regulation to open up the free market" was the demolition of White House's National Security Council Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense (an action Trump has had considerable trouble trying to explain) and major elements of such agencies as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While the bulk of the cutbacks and major changes in regulations were made to increase the power of major U.S. corporations to make profits, there was also the collateral damage brought on by a combination of budget-cutting for anything other than the Military-Industrial Complex and to support tax cuts for the wealthy and the large corporations, and Trump's visceral hatred for any innovative Federal program associated with President Obama. But the important point here is that the Bannon Doctrine of the Deconstruction of the Administrative State has had a major negative impact on the Trump Administration's ability to respond appropriately to the oncoming disaster.

If Bannon himself, an apparently intelligent and well-educated man, had been asked "Well, do you include in 'Deconstruction' such elements of the Federal government as those designed to ward off or minimize epidemics," he probably would have said "No." But the combination of his destructive construct, traditional Republican budget cutting for any regulatory functions, and Trump's Obama-hatred doomed the various Federal programs that could have made the Trumpidemic2020© much less worse than it is, to a combination of extinction, diminution, and poor leadership (chosen more for political adherence that expertise [sound familiar?]). 

Click here for the full article. 

Source: OpEdNews.com  

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