Chaos and Corruption
Government is not a for-profit business, so perhaps it’s understandable that businesspersons with no experience in public service are confused about their goals in high public offices. Their goals are to serve the people—equally—and to do all they can for the common good.
The new semi-official Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) headed by multi-billionaire Elon Musk seems especially confused. During the orgy of mass firings of federal employees in many agencies, serving the American people has taken a back seat to cutting costs. The firings are being done so sloppily that many employees have had to be quickly rehired including those responsible for the safety of nuclear weapons. And clearly, no attention has been paid to identifying individuals with critical skills or those with the wisdom of deep experience.
Surely all of us favor efficiency and cutting unnecessary costs. Just as surely, an organization as large as the federal government will have some fat that can be trimmed without diminishing services. What’s needed is a steak knife to trim any fat around the edges without slicing off pieces of the steak itself. But Mr. Musk has taken an axe to the meat of our government: dedicated public servants who do the essential daily work, typically for lower pay than in comparable private-sector jobs.
A few weeks ago, Musk strutted on a stage waving a chainsaw and gleefully grinning about the tens of thousands of people who have had their jobs cut—stable, productive careers wiped out in the cause of spending less. Talk about being out of touch with the people. It’s no wonder that Musk’s car company, Tesla, is seeing sharply declining sales, dropping stock value, and buyers’ remorse by many current owners (see photo of a Tesla bumper).
Musk isn’t the only Billionaire Boys Club member in the Trump Administration who is out of touch. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said on a podcast last week that average Americans wouldn’t complain if they didn’t get their Social Security for a month. Really? Millions of Americans depend on their monthly check for necessities like food and rent. Secretary Lutnick is living in a different reality.
The reality that the wealthy cherish is lower taxes on their wealth and fewer regulations on their businesses. The rush to cut government costs will inevitably lead to fewer services and regulations. With climate change posing the most dangerous—and costly—threat to life as we’ve known it, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) must be at full strength, but its new chief, Lee Zeldin, boasted last month in the Wall Street Journal of “driving a dagger through the heart” of climate regulations and has pledged to cut funding by two-thirds. Funding is also endangered for veterans’ services, medical research, education support, public health, National Parks, and other efforts for the common good.
It's no secret that the cost-cutting binge is partly intended to justify extending the 2017 Republican tax cuts, mostly for the rich, that will expire this year. Here’s a tip: watch which jobs are cut at the IRS. The Biden Administration hired new employees specifically to audit high-income and corporate tax returns which are typically difficult to audit and often hide significant taxable income.
Rather than cutting services to the people, let’s elect to Congress people who will raise taxes on high incomes to reduce the wealth gap between the rich and the rest. In the 1960s, the 400 richest Americans paid 56 percent of their income in taxes. Today, for the first time in our history, billionaires pay a lower effective tax rate (23% in 2018) than the working class. Congresspersons who vote to make the rich richer are either lining their own pockets, those of their wealthy donors, or both. That is corruption.