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The Depraved Indifference of Hollow Government

From the safety of Air Force One en route from Tel Aviv to Rome, President Trump dropped his FY 2018 budget on Washington, D.C., and sent OMB Director Mick Mulvaney to run point on the ground. They like to talk about it as a "hard power" budget. What they don't like to talk about are the consequences of unleashing such firepower on the American public.

Make no mistake about it, this budget is the realization of several decades' travail by small-government conservatives. As Grover Norquist, head of Americans for Tax Reform, famously put it, they want to shrink the federal government to the size that they can drown it in a bathtub. So when you hear President Trump and his surrogates pivot from "hard power" to expressing their heartfelt concerns for taxpayers first, think about where that idea comes from. Their messaging is rooted not in a concern for taxpayers as people who need clean air to breathe, clean water to drink, safe jobs and good schools, or social safety nets to help them out in hard times. No, their messaging is rooted in the abstraction of personal financial wealth untethered from the social compact upon which our country and modern western civilization are built.

Hard power and bathtub drownings once seemed like the fevered dreams of the far right, but they are now the preferred policy of the highest elected official in the United States. Many who have spent their careers in the swampy summers of our nation's capital will spend the next few days reassuring us that even the president's own party is unwilling to go along with the draconian cuts he has proposed. But that is cold comfort when we take into account the simple fact that these same people we are supposed to rely upon to protect vital institutions like EPA, FDA, and the Departments of Labor and Interior just got through rubber-stamping nominations for agency leaders who have never shown any real desire to promote the missions of those agencies and have most likely pledged some sort of loyalty oath to Mr. Trump.

So whether it is by dint of ineffectual leadership or insufficient resources, we are headed down a path toward hollow government reminiscent of the days before a cultural revolt demanded federal action to protect people from noxious air and filthy water, unsafe products, adulterated food, and dangerous workplaces. Sadly and not coincidentally, the people who will suffer most are those who lack a strong political voice – particularly in this administration, where the president surrounds himself with people who exude the same white male powerbroker image he sees in the mirror.

Don't expect to see energy task forces made up of poor black and Latino children or the elderly, who suffer asthma attacks when ozone levels are too high.

Workforce innovation concepts aren't coming from the construction workers, nurses, miners, or migrant farmworkers who suffer injuries and illnesses at high rates because workplace safety laws are outdated and underenforced.

Infrastructure development, if it happens, won't account for rising seas, sinking land, and the struggles of small communities at the water's edge.

And nobody will be around to hear concerns raised by fenceline communities who suffer a pollution body burden the likes of which Mr. Trump's friends from suburban mansions and downtown penthouses have never conceived.

No, the millions of U.S. residents who rely on the federal government to be a force for progress and protection will be left to suffer the consequences of this administration's depraved indifference to their struggles. But there is hope, because if we learned anything last November, it's that the American public will not abide a ruling party that appears dissociated from them and beholden to the corporate class.

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Matt Shudtz | May 23, 2017

The Depraved Indifference of Hollow Government

From the safety of Air Force One en route from Tel Aviv to Rome, President Trump dropped his FY 2018 budget on Washington, D.C., and sent OMB Director Mick Mulvaney to run point on the ground. They like to talk about it as a “hard power” budget. What they don’t like to talk about are […]

William Funk | May 22, 2017

Requiring Formal Rulemaking Is a Thinly Veiled Attempt to Halt Regulation

Originally published on The Regulatory Review by CPR Member Scholar William Funk. Professor Kent Barnett recently opined in The Regulatory Review that formal rulemaking really is not that bad and may actually be a good thing in certain circumstances. His argument deserves closer review because the proposed Regulatory Accountability Act (RAA) would require the equivalent of formal […]

James Goodwin | May 16, 2017

Ahead of Markup, CPR Member Scholars Voice Concerns over the Senate Regulatory Accountability Act

Today, 27 Member Scholars of the Center for Progressive Reform, leading academics who specialize in administrative law and regulatory policy, submitted a letter to Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Ron Johnson and Ranking Member Claire McCaskill outlining their serious concerns with the Senate Regulatory Accountability Act. That bill is among several aimed […]

Matthew Freeman | May 15, 2017

CPR Scholars’ Recent Op-Eds

CPR Member Scholars continue to make their voices heard on the nation’s opinion pages. You can always review the latest and greatest pieces on our op-eds page, but here’s a roundup from the last few weeks to save you a couple clicks. Two CPR Member Scholars had pieces in The American Prospect in mid-April. Tom […]

Daniel Farber | May 12, 2017

Thinking Globally, Acting Transnationally

The U.S. government obviously isn’t going to be taking a global leadership role regarding climate change, not for the next four years. At one time, that would have been the end of the story: the only way to accomplish anything internationally was through national governments. But we live in a different world today, and there […]

David Hunter | May 5, 2017

Trump’s Fossil Fuel Dream Team Faces Climate Change’s Checks and Balances

Due to the blinders of his fossil fuel dream team and the industry’s myths denying climate change (#ExxonKnew), President Donald Trump seems once again on the verge of withdrawing from the Paris climate change accord. That’s a fool’s errand. Withdrawal from the Paris Agreement would be a major blow to U.S. standing and leadership in […]

Sandra Zellmer | May 4, 2017

Trump’s Plan to Dismantle National Monuments Comes with Steep Cultural and Ecological Costs

Professors Michelle Bryan and Monte Mills of the University of Montana co-authored this article with Center for Progressive Reform Member Scholar and University of Nebraska—Lincoln Professor Sandra Zellmer. It originally appeared in The Conversation on May 3, 2017. In the few days since President Trump issued his Executive Order on National Monuments, many legal scholars […]

David Flores | May 3, 2017

Reaching Higher Ground in the Face of Climate Change

We’ve seen a flurry of news coverage in the last several weeks on climate migration, displacement, and relocation. In a new report published today, the Center for Progressive Reform explores these issues and examines tools and resources that communities can use when faced with the challenges of relocating out of harm’s way.  The New York […]

James Goodwin | May 2, 2017

Anything but Moderate: The Senate Regulatory Accountability Act of 2017

Today, Center for Progressive Reform Member Scholars and staff are releasing a comprehensive analysis of the Senate Regulatory Accountability of 2017 (S. 951), which Sens. Rob Portman (R-OH) and Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) introduced last week. Our analysis explains how S. 951 would drastically overhaul the Administrative Procedure Act, which has successfully guided agency enforcement of […]