Federal employment is at its lowest since the mid-1960s. Has the country fallen apart without the Washington bureaucracy holding it all together? Hardly.
Donald Trump was elected to accomplish a number of objectives. One of them was to cut, and hard, the federal administrative state. The mission has not been accomplished, but after a year, the federal workforce has fallen from more than 3 million to about 2.7 million, roughly where it was six decades ago, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Like a thousand lawyers at the bottom of the ocean, it’s a good start. But cutting the federal leviathan by roughly a 10th โ the largest peacetime downsizing ever, says the Cato Institute โ is not enough. Even with the reduction in workers, the effort did not produce less spending.
So two things need to happen: The effort to cut the federal employment needs to continue, and spending has to be slashed.
When the job cuts began a year ago, we noted that “the wails and screeching breakdowns over the injustice of federal workers losing their jobs are ear-piercing.” Google’s AI, which too often seems to parrot the Democratic Party line, warns thatย “federal workforce cuts threaten to degrade essential public services, trigger widespread economic damage outside D.C., and cause a massive loss of institutional expertise. Critics warn of slower Social Security, tax delays, weakened agency effectiveness, and reliance on costlier contractors, with 64% of the public concerned about losing experienced staff.”
Please, please give us “a massive loss of institutional expertise” and “weakened agency effectiveness,” because the experts have shown they are not worthy of the title, while weaker agencies mean more liberty for the rest of us.
See Also: Latest Jobs Report Explains Why Dems Hate Trump So Much
Deeper cuts to the federal workforce would by no means be catastrophic. It’s absurd to believe that lopping off chunks of the administrative state will cause “economic damage outside D.C.” Markets perform better when they are left alone, meaning more wealth and job creation. The bureaucracy is a dead rather than invisible hand on economic growth.
We have to reiterate what we said a little more than a year ago: Washington should not be running a jobs program and handing out employment for life. Any thoughts that federal employees are in the business of โpublic serviceโ are erroneous.
Not all but surely most are there to serve themselves and their party, which they have generously funded with their taxpayer-provided salaries. (Nearly 84% of all federal worker donations to presidential candidates in 2024 went to Kamala Harris.) Itโs a mistake to assume that just because someone draws a federal paycheck that they are wise, hardworking, incorruptible, never driven by their own interests but only those of the people they work for. They are humans, not angels.
In the year since the reductions began, the economy has been growing, and inflation has fallen from 3% to 2.4%. The only unrest we see in the streets is being wrought by Democrats who have been incited by other Democrats to rampage against ICE officers enforcing federal law. The environment hasn’t been spoiled, nor have our resources been depleted. Intellectual pursuit and cultural life have been poisoned not due to job losses in the District of Columbia but because the Democrats have become radical degenerates. The Republicans, over the opposition of the Democrats, are trying to root out political corruption and restore confidence in our elections.
Ripping out the bureaucracy will not yield chaos but will instead deliver the immense benefits of the Democrats losing their workforce, “the one that keeps them in power even when the GOP has held the White House and both chambers of Congress, and expands it when Democrats are in the majority and occupying the executive branch.”
So keep chopping, Mr. President. It’s the righteous thing to do.
โ Written by the I&I Editorial Board





I&I writes: :…Please, please give us โa massive loss of institutional expertiseโ.
As with COVID’s “medical experts” which were hagiographic-like always pointed to as the height of expertise in COVID education and nearly always wrong, “expertise” whether used as an authority in government bureaucracy or in medical matters is much overrated.
What I found out during COVID is that the more the term “experts” was used, the less reliability was the “experts expertise.” “Expertise” was used more as a political term than an accurate description of real “expertise” practiced.
Protects us, dear Lord, from all the “experts” and their so-called “expertise.” During COVID all the “experts” were just fools living in a fools paradise, inhabited by unaccountable, egocentric and arrogant “experts!”
No way is the federal government payroll the size it was in the 1960’s. That is absurd to the extreme. I don’t care what the Bureau of Labor Statistics says.
You guys need to check your sources of info. You KNOW you cannot believe government numbers. Come on now.
Yeah good job….those cuts aren’t coming in DC folks. You people are as bad as the lib elite. Our office, supporting the DOW in Texas, has been cut in half. Between fear of losing a job and looking elsewhere, retiring and only in one case being let go, we’ve lost 15 people. Because this was done outside the normal procedures laid down by OPM, we’ve lost legitimate leadership slots because green suiters were put in charge of doing the cuts. They cut director positions and deputy positions by accident at our local office after those positions became vacant just prior to the DOGE kicking off. They were forced to temporarliy close our office. I now drive 45 min into a cesspool blue city incapable of maintaining their roads instead of driving 10 min from my rural home to the base I took the job to be on. Most if not all of the folks I work with are vets. I served 26 years as both enlisted and as an officer. Most of that time was deployed to combat…fighting your wars. I’m not lazy. I arrive to work at 6AM. I work longer now then when on active duty. Our mission, supporting both the joint base and the new contingency ops south of the border means more with less…..nothing has stopped. I agree that USAID was a massive waste…actually you guys don’t know the half of it. They actively worked against both US Mil and even DOS objectives in Iraq if it suited them. But blaming “gov workers” because of a talking point gimme a break. I’ve been doing this since I was 17. Who’s gonna do it…the snowflake brigades you guys are raising. They don’t have the experience. Smarten up!