MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘Gridlock’

The Shutdown Shows Us How Unreliable and Harmful Government Can Really Be | Mises Wire

Posted by M. C. on February 2, 2019

https://mises.org/wire/shutdown-shows-us-how-unreliable-and-harmful-government-can-really-be

They document some of the problems due to the government shutdown. However, long wait times at airport security, problems providing food stamps, difficulties with affordable housing contracts expirations, meeting payrolls, etc., etc., do not disprove that “government is the problem.”

To illustrate this, remember that there are many things the government does that it has no business doing. Say one of them was creating a bureaucracy that had the power to decide on issuing “free speech” permits, which they sold to those approved to speak on particular public issues (you might think that could never happen, especially given the First Amendment, but it is not so different from the effects of the fairness doctrine for broadcast radio before the Reagan administration eliminated it) or that administered the civil asset forfeiture abuses of their citizens. Neither advances our general welfare. Neither comports with the logic or core documents of America’s founding. Yet people would adapt to the rules they were faced with, and their expectations would come to incorporate them. If at that point, a government shutdown shut off funding to those bureaucracies, those disappointed expectations would cause people difficulties. Complaints on that score, however, do not demonstrate that such government functions will be considered more valuable than before as a result.

Crowding Out the Private Sector

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The Shutdown and Liberty

Posted by M. C. on January 19, 2019

The great threat to the federal government today, which includes Congress, is the threat that the American public will not notice any significant disruption of their lives because of the furlough of 800,000 workers. 

https://www.garynorth.com/public/19065.cfm

Gary North

If President Trump holds firm on the shutdown until January 20, 2021, he will have struck the greatest blow for liberty and against bureaucracy in American political history.

To achieve this, all that he has to do is nothing.

In doing this, he will have overturned a classic slogan of American politics: “You can’t beat something with nothing.”

DON’T DO SOMETHING. SIT THERE

Trump is exercising his legitimate constitutional right to do nothing. All he has to do is do nothing until January 20, 2021.

These days, Congress does not get around to passing a real budget. It just keeps passing budget extensions that last a couple of months. There is not enough agreement in Congress to produce an annual budget any longer. Gridlock is here.

These extensions are called continuing resolutions. They are now permanent. Wikipedia reports:

Between fiscal year 1977 and fiscal year 2015, Congress only passed all twelve regular appropriations bills on time in four years – fiscal years 1977, 1989, 1995, and 1997.Between 1980 and 2013, there were eight government shutdowns in the United States. Most of these shutdowns revolved around budget issues including fights over the debt ceiling and led to the furlough of certain ‘non-essential’ personnel. The majority of these fights lasted 1–2 days with a few exceptions lasting more than a week.

The article provides a list of these continuing resolutions since 2001. It goes on for pages. Read the rest of this entry »

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Why More Gridlock in Congress is Good for America | The Daily Bell

Posted by M. C. on November 9, 2018

https://www.thedailybell.com/all-articles/news-analysis/why-more-gridlock-in-congress-is-good-for-america/

By Joe Jarvis

Republicans expanded their majority in the Senate, and Democrats took the House.

Surely this will cause more gridlock. Less will get done. Fewer bills will pass. Each side’s agenda will be watered down.

And that is about the best results we could hope for.

The less that gets done the better. For everyone.

Calvin Coolidge was the last President to understand this… or at least to care.

Every President tries to leave his mark on the country. But usually, it is a blemish.

President from 1923-1929, Calvin Coolidge said, “It is much more important to kill bad bills than to pass good ones.” Read the rest of this entry »

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