
The executive branch of government has grown over time with it greatest growth period last century. George Washington appointed a Cabinet of four departments: State Treasury War (now Defense) and Attorney General (now Justice). Departments of Interior (1849) and Agriculture (1862) were added in the 19th century. In the first half of the 20th century Departments of Commerce (1913) and Labor (1913) were added. In the second half of the 20th century the executive branch exploded well beyond the original enumerated powers with Departments of Health and Human Services (1953) Housing and Human Development (1965) Transportation (1966) Energy (1974) Education (1979) and Veterans Affairs (1989). Homeland Security was created in 2002. The role of these departments has also increased from overseeing industry to participating in select niches of industry and even virtual nationalization of select industry segments. Government monopolies are notoriously inefficient. Revenues are collected not just to pay for government services but now departments redistribute funds between people between states and even between countries. The problem is that government execution gets worse the bigger it gets. The federal budget deficits have caused the national debt to skyrocket over $18 trillion with no end in sight.
If our federal government is really too large where to begin? The first step is to convene a Committee Against Government Waste much like under President Reagan to develop plans to eliminate duplication inefficiency and waste. For example there is no reason for 24 education and job training programs to be scattered among seven different federal departments and agencies. The next step is to reorganize the Executive branch to eliminate duplication and waste between departments such as folding Veterans affairs into Defense and moving the Coast Guard from Homeland Security into Defense. Homeland Security could then be folded under Justice to focus on enforcement. The next step is to privatize work done by the public sector that should rightly be in the private sector such as: Federal Reserve Banks Export-Import Bank Fannie Mae Freddie Mac Ginnie Mae PBGC Amtrak TSA TVA Medicare and Social Security. The federal government does not need to own so much park land and should devolve this land back to the states so they can manage its use for parks and resource exploitation. The next step is to eliminate transfer (redistribution) payments between states to decentralize investment decision making back to the states which represents 17 of the federal budget. Finally plans must be put in place to dismantle or devolve the functions of the Departments of Education Energy Transportation Housing and Human Development and Health and Human Services. The 80-plus means-tested welfare programs are so vast and complex that they are unmanageable from a system-wide perspective. Cabinet Secretaries should be measured by how much they downsized their departments and how many regulations have been repealed. Republicans have talked a good game of limited government but pragmatic leadership is missing. Constitutional grounding will provide the framework for long overdue downsizing of our federal government beginning now.
The American people identified government as the most important U.S. problem so maybe it is time to relook at the size and scope of the federal government. After all of these changes are made there should be half as many Cabinet Departments and the cost of the federal government could also be halved. This is the vision I would like to see in a Presidential candidate campaign because it is transformational and returns to the fundamentals outlined in our original Constitution. Hopefully Ted Cruz will not be the only Presidential candidate who will offer radical reform ideas to begin the repair and realignment of our federal government.