Author Topic: Administrative Agencies, bureaucracy, regs in action, NGOs: 4th Branch of Govt.  (Read 151173 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Your post reminds me of the importance of the primal measuring stick of "What % of people work for the Feds?  Each State?  Each City?" etc.

Body-by-Guinness

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Catholic Charities Slathered w/ Millions in Dem Congressional Districts
« Reply #401 on: January 30, 2025, 03:48:28 PM »
Post cites hard numbers with an attached chart noting which congressional districts—most of which, but not all, are in Dem districts—these tens and hundreds of millions of dollars were spent in.

Hopefully we see a hard audit of Catholic Charities in the most suspect of these districts tracing the cash flow, with that audit informing the next one:

https://x.com/GenFlynn/status/1884776024929415664

Body-by-Guinness

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Data Republican Tracks Some Serious Quarry
« Reply #402 on: February 01, 2025, 04:18:56 PM »
Oh my goodness, Data Republican is pulling on NGO threads and all sorts of astounding relationships are falling out. A couple that stood out:

• She is taking EINs (employer ID #s) and dropping them into business listing databases and finding all sorts of strange bedfellows NGOs I’m the same buildings as various orgs with all sorts of Dem and Rep politicos serving as corporate officers, on boards and such. Once or twice I’d take as a coincidence, but dozens or more? Cut outs and money laundering is my take.

• As noted above, all sorts of luminaries are associated with the co-located NGO/orgs if various roles one presumes are a paid positions.

Bottom line, she is tracking the Uniparty’s footprints through the sands on NGO funding. The MSM should be all over this shit. The fact they aren’t leaves me willing to bet THEY have THEIR share of affiliations with all the above.

Well worth your time to explore this and related posts of hers, though I apologize if your jaw ends up locked in a permanently locked position.

https://x.com/DataRepublican/status/1885711150983324009

ETA her conclusion:

TL;DR: We are funneling massive amounts of taxpayer money—mostly through the State Department and USAID—to NGOs stacked with high-profile establishment politicians from both parties.

And this is just from pulling one thread that started with one NGO: Consortium for Elections & Political Process Strengthening.

How many more are out there waiting to be uncovered?

End of thread, for now. 🫡
« Last Edit: February 01, 2025, 04:21:26 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

Body-by-Guinness

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Best $3 I’ve Spent
« Reply #403 on: February 01, 2025, 04:27:52 PM »
Another DR post:

DataRepublican (small r)

@DataRepublican

I totaled the active grants listed on the website—$1,479,962,814,823.87. That’s $1.5 trillion in spending, spread across multiple years. And that’s just the big-ticket grants—countless smaller awards (<1 million) aren’t even included.

We are being bled to death by the Uniparty through NGOs.

BBG here: I love the $.87. She is into accuracy and details. I just subscribed to her ($3/mo) as she says if enough do she’ll quit her day job and do this full time.

DougMacG

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NGOs subverting our laws and tax dollars: "Lutheran Family Services"
« Reply #404 on: February 02, 2025, 10:35:09 AM »
https://x.com/genflynn/status/1885872007062892568?s=46&t=oXM3QUNDayEotvdo1W-zQA
The first misnomer, these 'migrants' aren't Lutheran.

I've got caseworkers calling me everyday to house "new arrivals". By definition these are unvetted people with no credit report no rental references and no background check possible.  No thank you.

What happened to the separation of church and state, the separation of ngo and state, and the separation of private sector and state?

A nonprofit, by what should be the definition, is someone who makes less than you and me, doesn't perform the service for money.

This whole industry needs to be stopped. We are a very charitable people. Conflating tax dollars and charity undermines both.

I know this ever since I was sued by the United Way for wanting to remove a person who hadn't paid in months or years. Not one thin dime is what they will get from me forever if they can't define their mission as something other than undermining contracts and screwing up markets.
« Last Edit: February 02, 2025, 10:46:10 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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When my mother was in Peru helping the village of Humay (20 years ago?) there was a terrible earthquake and in its aftermath came the NGOs.   My mother was deeply disappointed and then angry with what she saw as their true dynamics.

Body-by-Guinness

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What $600 Million Every Couple Months to an NGO for Illegals Among Friends?
« Reply #406 on: February 04, 2025, 09:58:32 AM »
@WallStreetApes

Elon Musk just shared the Biden Admin shifted billions of dollars from helping Americans in need to facilitating illegal immigration

This is how bad it got, a NGO got paid $600 million EVERY 2 MONTHS to facilitate illegal immigration

“I spoke to a gentleman that works in DHS. He actually sends the electronic fund transfers”

LET ME REPEAT: $600,000,000 of US taxpayer money sent to an NGO, EVERY 2-3 MONTHS for illegal migrants
- House Homeland Security Committee Hearing

Crafty_Dog

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 :-o :-o :-o

Who was the NGO? 

Body-by-Guinness

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« Last Edit: February 04, 2025, 03:03:13 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

Body-by-Guinness

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Data Republican Pulls on a Single Thread & a Naked Never Trump RINO Stands Nude
« Reply #409 on: February 04, 2025, 02:59:56 PM »
Wow, this is getting quite a bit more interesting, with the RINO(s) in question currently standing mute (yes Mona Charen, I'm thinking about you and others).

If Tony Soprano or his non-fictional peers partake of this sort fund source obscurring behavior it's called "money laundering," as those supporting this stuff see it as "defending democracy." Putative ideal context is everything, I guess.

Hmm, think RICO laws come into potential play here? What say you all?

https://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2025/02/03/the-dirty-truth-behind-bill-kristols-money-n4936617
« Last Edit: February 04, 2025, 05:57:31 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

Crafty_Dog

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I'm seeing why you like this gal!

Body-by-Guinness

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I'm seeing why you like this gal!
Wish I had the fiscal chops to fully partake of the resources she has posted as it looks like there are a lot of very interesting, circuitous, and telling paths to tread within her datasets.

Body-by-Guinness

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Money, Meet the Ratholes You got Tossed Down
« Reply #412 on: February 04, 2025, 06:56:37 PM »
Another source documenting various US AID/NGO follies:

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2025/02/even_a_short_list_of_how_usaid_spent_our_money_is_outrageous.html

Worth noting one point made in this piece: imagine if the US had applied these funds as effectively as China is applying their aid monies….

DougMacG

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"the parade of public tax dollars to private causes has to stop."

   - Amen

Body-by-Guinness

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An Interesting “Resistance” Snapshot
« Reply #414 on: February 05, 2025, 06:18:48 AM »
@Oilfield_Rando
·
54m
The EPA is also planning to do this.
They stashed a $20 billion Inflation Reduction Act slush fund for left wing non profits and NGOs at
@Citibank
 before Trump took office so that it couldn’t be rescinded.
The money has to be reclaimed and Citibank needs to face consequences.
Quote
Natalie Winters
@nataliegwinters
·
19h
USAID was supposed to be the hotbed of resistance against Trump 2.0.
They were going to launder money to international “democracy” NGOs and media outlet to attack President Trump.

ccp

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great insight of how the bureacracy was corrupted .

I had not idea of any of this .

We expect far more revelations to come out in the near future if the crats have not already destroyed the evidence .  We know they have been deleting with all 10 fingers as fast as possible God can only know how much .   Like the J6 committee kangaroo court .

Body-by-Guinness

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Keeping the Corrupt Gravy Train Rolling Down the Track
« Reply #416 on: February 05, 2025, 06:27:47 AM »
2nd post.

A good synopsis of where things stand re NGOs as well as a peak at the strategy “Progressives” are employing to keep the USAID gravy train on track:

USAID isn’t just a ridiculous scam on U.S. taxpayers, it funds leftist causes that erode western civilization and destroy traditional values.

Author John Daniel Davidson profile
JOHN DANIEL DAVIDSON

The most common argument you’ll hear from those defending the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) is that the grant dollars in question are just a fraction of the federal budget — less than one percent! Even if the Trump administration eliminated USAID altogether it wouldn’t put much of a dent in the deficit or help control the national debt, is the argument. Everyone from the talking heads at CNN and MSNBC to Jim Geraghty at National Review are repeating this line.

But trimming the federal budget and reducing the deficit aren’t really the point of this exercise. The point is to expose USAID for the left-wing propaganda and regime change operation that it has become, and to shut it down. In the six decades since it was established, USAID has gone from fighting poverty, spreading American ideals, and undercutting Soviet propaganda, to becoming a woke propaganda operation of its own that actively undermines the pillars of western civilization. It’s gone from exporting democracy to exporting deviancy, and it’s time to shut it down.

President Trump this week tasked Elon Musk and Secretary of State Marco Rubio with a review of the agency’s grants and expenditures, which has already shone a much-needed light on where tens of billions of U.S. taxpayer dollars are going. My colleague Tristan Justice detailed a handful of some of the most insane projects USAID funds, including “$70,000 for a ‘DEI musical’ in Ireland, $47,000 for a ‘transgender opera’ in Colombia, $32,000 for a ‘transgender comic book’ in Peru, and $1.5 million for an LGBT jobs program in Serbia.” Other projects were to fund electric vehicles in Vietnam, infrastructure in Egypt, meals for Al-Qaeda terrorists in Syria, and internet censorship in the United Kingdom.

One anonymous X user, @DataRepublican, created a searchable database of federal government grants that’s helped uncover even more outrageous projects funded by USAID. Some of these are genuinely funny and easy to ridicule. For example, a $30 million grant for an organization that funds women making ponchos in the Guatemalan highlands and bankrolls “community organizing” in Burkina Faso. Or a $20 million grant for a Sesame Street-style show in Iraq, a $2 million grant to promote pottery in Morocco, and $15 million for condoms and contraceptives in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.

The common theme in many of these grants is that they push LGBTQ, green, and woke ideologies under the pretext of fighting poverty and promoting democracy abroad. What began in 1961 as a way to promote stability and lure countries out of the Soviet orbit during the Cold War has over the past six decades transformed into an instrument of propaganda aimed at the foundations of western civilization. Everywhere you look in the USAID database, you see projects promoting LGBTQ ideology, mass immigration, multiculturalism, DEI, climate change-ism, and the like. You see programs that undermine the traditional family, that enable anti-free speech censorship, that strive to make the rest of the world just like urban liberal enclaves in the U.S.

Even more alarming, a significant portion of USAID funds appear to be nothing more than sinecures for connected establishment politicians in the U.S. The person who built the database, @DataRepublican, revealed that huge amounts of taxpayer dollars, through both the State Department and USAID (the former operating as a passthrough to the latter), go to NGOs stacked with establishment politicians from both parties — basically, the Washington uniparty.

As I write this, crowds of pro-USAID protesters, egged on by Democrat politicians, are gathering in Washington, D.C., to demand the arrest of Elon Musk and the shutdown of the Senate. Thousands of organizations in and around our nation’s capital are wholly or almost wholly funded through USAID grants in what amounts to a massive ongoing grift. For them, losing those funds means their NGOs will simply fold.

And fold they should. What began as a State Department agency to promote freedom and stability abroad during the Cold War has devolved, as perhaps it was inevitably going to, into a scam that steals from American taxpayers and uses their money to promote the dissolution of the American nation and the destruction of its founding ideals.

So it doesn’t matter how much or how little we might save by shutting down USAID — although every penny saved is worth it — what really matters is twofold: that we starve left-wing NGOs of the funds they use to promote toxic anti-American ideologies all over the world, and that the Trump administration demonstrates that it can indeed shut down executive branch programs and agencies that don’t align with White House priorities.

The fact that Democrats are howling about this is an admission, on their part, that they don’t think a Republican administration should be allowed to control the administrative bureaucracy. They think that belongs to them and their pet NGOs and activists, who have been using it to wage psychological warfare on the entire world for decades. That ends now, and if it means the women making ponchos in the Guatemalan highlands will have to find another source of funding, or the transgender comic books don’t ever get made, then so be it.

John Daniel Davidson is a senior editor at The Federalist. His writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Claremont Review of Books, The New York Post, and elsewhere. He is the author of Pagan America: the Decline of Christianity and the Dark Age to Come. Follow him on Twitter, @johnddavidson.

https://thefederalist.com/2025/02/05/defunding-usaid-isnt-about-reducing-the-deficit-its-about-shutting-down-left-wing-propaganda/

Body-by-Guinness

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Thank You for Your Service or Poke the Bear, Deal w/ the Teeth
« Reply #417 on: February 05, 2025, 08:32:12 AM »
Don’t let the door smack your fundament on the way out, USAID (“Progressives”) shocktroops:

https://x.com/libsoftiktok/status/1886978056289398846

Body-by-Guinness

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USAID Money Laundering 101
« Reply #418 on: February 06, 2025, 10:58:42 AM »
DataRepublican (small r)
@DataRepublican
1️⃣ Gov-funded NGO gets a USAID grant for something vague like “strengthening education.”

2️⃣ That NGO dumps millions into a DAF (Donor-Advised Fund).

3️⃣ The DAF isn’t required to disclose what the NGO told them to do with the money.

4️⃣ But somehow, every hyperpolitical nonprofit with a sketchy agenda ends up getting funded.

https://x.com/DataRepublican/status/1887220679059382369

Body-by-Guinness

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Got Your Democracy Safeguards Right Here
« Reply #419 on: February 06, 2025, 05:41:03 PM »
2nd post.

@BreitbartNews
Some insane stuff to be found on @DataRepublican's site

The "National Democratic Institute"—with Tom Daschle, Stacey Abrams, Donna Brazile, Michael McFaul, & Randi Weingarten on its board—received $887k from fundraisers in 2022-2023 and received $167 MILLION in govt grants.

-$81.7 million of that went to employee compensation
-15 officers received compensation between $178k and $344k for a total of $2.8 million
-$4.1 million on office expenses
-$13.7 million on travel
-$4.2 million on conferences, conventions, & meetings

Its mission statement? "To work in partnership around the world to strengthen and safeguard democratic institutions, processes, norms, and values to secure a better quality of life for all

Body-by-Guinness

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Make That GONGO
« Reply #420 on: February 07, 2025, 08:23:25 PM »

DougMacG

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Re: Make That GONGO
« Reply #421 on: February 07, 2025, 09:14:48 PM »
Scoring this as a home run. Pointing out what everybody knows but no one will say.  You say GONGO and I'm trying to say  without swearing that NGO is an oxy-f*cking-moron. "Non-government" with nothing but government money?? And the same people directing it that run the government, or at least used to run the government.

They take us for morons.

Each one of these takedowns is a Grand Slam (border crossings down 93%?).

These "NGOs" are also what Dinesh D'Sousa was tracking in 2000 Mules.  He didn't have it exactly right but he was on to something.

The funding for the so-called ngos needs to be shut down in a way that it can't come back. Now that we know exactly what's happening, there's no excuse.
« Last Edit: February 07, 2025, 09:17:30 PM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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FO: Trump's rampage continues
« Reply #422 on: February 21, 2025, 04:01:37 AM »


(5) TRUMP SIGNS EO TO DECONSTRUCT ADMINISTRATIVE STATE: President Donald Trump issued an executive order yesterday directing federal agencies to review all regulations for consistency with the law and Trump administration policy. The order also directs federal agencies to de-prioritize enforcement actions that stretch statutory authority or exceed the constitutional powers of the federal government.

(6) HEGSETH TELLS DOD OFFICIALS TO PREPARE SPENDING CUTS: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth directed senior Department of Defense (DOD) officials, service branches, and agencies to provide proposals to cut 8% of their projected spending annually for the next five years. According to Hegseth’s memo, priority cybersecurity programs, surface ship programs, Indo-Pacific construction programs, and munitions programs, among others, may not be included in proposed cuts. The DOD said spending cuts will be redirected to defense programs aligned with President Trump’s agenda.

(7) NOEM EXPANDS POLYGRAPHS TO CATCH DHS LEAKS: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem directed the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to use polygraph examinations to crack down on unauthorized contact with media and nonprofits. Noem said DHS leaks have negatively impacted border and interior immigration enforcement.

DougMacG

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Bureaucracy, regs in action, NGOs: 4th Branch, Thomas Sowell
« Reply #423 on: February 21, 2025, 07:01:29 AM »
“You will never understand bureaucracies until you understand that for bureaucrats procedure is everything and outcomes are nothing.”


—Thomas Sowell

Body-by-Guinness

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“Ensuring Lawful Governance and Implementing the President's DOGE Regs”
« Reply #424 on: February 21, 2025, 02:36:07 PM »
Taking a broadsword to the administrative state:

🔥 Yesterday, Politico reported another Trump masterstroke in a story headlined, “Trump executive order requires sweeping review of federal regulations.” Wait till you hear about this one. It’s about to replace the 4-D chessboard with a new 5-D one.

image 5.png
The newest executive order is titled, “Ensuring Lawful Governance and Implementing the President's "Department of Government Efficiency" Regulatory Initiative.” They had no idea this was coming. It stacked on several previous EOs and relies on last year’s terrific Supreme Court decisions about agency powers. We will need to peek inside it to find all the presents.

First, the order began with the shot-heard-round-the-Swamp. The war on the Deep State has entered its public phase. Trump’s forces fired on Fort Sumter. It was an open declaration of war:

image 6.png
Boom. “It is the policy of my Administration … to commence the deconstruction of the overbearing and burdensome administrative state.”

The “overbearing and burdensome administrative state?” That’s a synonym for the Swamp, the Deep State. Trump is commencing its deconstruction.

Section two begins the order. “Agency heads shall, in coordination with their DOGE Team Leads and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, initiate a process to review all regulations … for consistency with law and Administration policy.”

They are going to review all the regulations. All of them.

During that comprehensive review, seven categories of regulations must be identified for the chopping block. I couldn’t pick a favorite example, so here they all are:

image 7.png
In the meantime, Agency heads are ordered to “de-prioritize enforcement” of any regulations that exceed constitutional or statutory authority —based on the Supreme Court’s latest trimming of agency authority— or that do not comply with Administration policy.

If the progressive left thought it already had its hands full firefighting employment lawsuits, that was nothing. This order lights fires all over the national regulatory landscape.

The implications are staggering. The regulatory state is vast, far bigger even than actual laws passed by Congress, which is saying a lot. I’ve suggested before in C&C that if Trump really wanted to kick off an economic renaissance in this country, he should prune a lot of regulation that stifles innovation and small business development.

I was thinking way too small.

He’s going to prune the whole thing.

And he put DOGE in charge. Forget Elon Musk. DOGE is just another name for an existing agency —the repurposed Digital Services Agency, whose charter is increasing efficiency— and which reports directly to the White House. In other words, Trump has a monitoring team in every important government agency watching like hawks to ensure the order gets carried out.

This order just made DOGE’s cost-cutting efforts look like a local comedian putting on a warmup act while the band was running late. Now the band has taken the stage to a sold-out arena. Regular readers know that I wondered whether the whole cost-cutting binge, welcome as it was, was just a distraction or decoy while the DOGE team gathered data. But for what?

This order is the political equivalent of the Moon falling out of orbit and smashing into the Earth.

Suddenly the Golden Age looks a lot less like a typical oversold campaign promise and more like a potential reality. There is no way to estimate the potentially explosive effect cutting massive red tape could produce for the economy, technological innovation, and small business creation. It’s potentially infinite.

And politically? It’s another masterstroke. Every single person outside government is going to be thinking hard about how de-regulation could affect their industry and their prospects. Democrats will be forced to defend the indefensible regulatory behemoth. It will unwind decades of governmental picking of winners and losers.

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/feeling-the-heat-friday-february

Body-by-Guinness

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They Exist to Resist … Republicans
« Reply #425 on: February 24, 2025, 05:06:13 PM »
A good survey of how “independent agencies,” AKA the Deep State, came to be and the constitutional questions in general:

Elections Have to Matter: "Independent" Agencies Are Grossly Unconstitutional

If Presidents can't control the Executive Branch, elections don't really matter. The Administrative State exists to perpetuate unelected Democrat control, no matter who wins or loses. It has to end.

ROD D. MARTIN

FEB 24, 2025

Trump's war on the “deep state” - New Statesman
by Rod D. Martin
February 24, 2025

Ninety years ago, Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal created a constitutional obscenity: agencies of government that violated separation of powers and that were not accountable to the elected President.

You might find it odd that as dynamic a President as FDR would want this, but oh dear reader, you are missing the point. The agencies were staffed almost entirely by Democrats, who were happy to do Roosevelt’s bidding. It’s after Roosevelt, when Democrats lost elections to Eisenhower, Nixon, Reagan, both Bushes and Trump that the brilliance of FDR’s plan kicked in. Because a permanent bureaucracy permanently staffed by Democrats will perpetuate Democrat rule no matter who wins a mere election.

The New Deal was, in short, a stealth, slow-motion coup. We’re still living under the new regime it created, keeping the forms but not the substance of the old Republic.

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To achieve these ends, Roosevelt’s Democrats had to do two things.

First, the new agencies had to violate separation of powers, creating hosts of siloed subject-matter dictatorships. The EPA makes laws (and no, Congress may not delegate its lawmaking powers). It also administers those laws and prosecutes violations. But it prosecutes in front of its own “Administrative Law Judges”, who report to the same agency that made, administered, and prosecuted the laws “violated”. Under the Supreme Court’s landmark Chevron case (overturned last summer), you didn’t even have a right to appeal to a real Article 3 court; and if somehow you got there, the Senate-confirmed judge was required to defer to the agency’s interpretation of, well, pretty much everything.

Did I mention this was and is obscene?

Chevron Attacked the Very Idea of America
Chevron Attacked the Very Idea of America
ROD D. MARTIN
·
JULY 4, 2024
Read full story
But second, Democrats had to make all these agencies “independent”: not accountable, and certainly not fireable, by the elected President. The arrogance that’s bred has metastasized to absurd extremes. This weekend, the Executive Office of the President sent out an all-staff email requiring every Federal employee to submit a short list of their accomplishments for the week. State Department Under Secretary for Management Tibor Nagy directed the Department’s employees to “resist”:



Seriously? Who the heck elected Tibor Nagy?

And that’s exactly the point. An “independent” agency, staffed almost entirely with unfireable unionized Democrats, is completely impervious to elections and beyond the power of voters to demand change. That’s a feature, not a bug: it’s the deliberate design. And it goes far beyond “resisting” performance reviews.

It’s also completely unconstitutional. And I don’t just mean that it violates Article 2, Section 1, which states in part that “The executive power shall be vested in a President of the United States”. I mean that the Founders’ reasoning was that a free people should be able to peacefully overthrow its government every four years.

But the regime FDR created has ruled us for most of a century, without the slightest concern for who won an election or who didn’t. Does nothing ever seem to change in Washington, no matter who’s “in power”? This is why. The Democrats (and their RINO allies) are permanently in power.

After having faced this Deep State’s full onslaught in his first term, and having just spent four years thinking about it along with the smartest conservatives around, Donald Trump is waging a direct assault on this bloated, unconstitutional regime. He’s using his constitutional powers to dismantle that regime and restore the system the Founders created. In the process, he’s forcing the courts — and the American public — to confront the reality of this structural corruption head-on.

Restoring the Constitution: Nondelegation Doctrine

Trump’s administration has ordered agencies to scrutinize every rule, regulation, and policy that exceeds Congressional authority, violates the Constitution, or undermines national interests. The goal? To declare these unlawful edicts null and void. This isn’t just a deregulatory push — it’s a frontal legal challenge to the Administrative State itself.

Ultimately, this involves nondelegation doctrine, the historic legal view that Congress may not delegate its lawmaking powers to anyone else. The Supreme Court abandoned nondelegation doctrine in the 1930s, and it was considered a dead letter until very recently. But the Fifth Circuit upheld it in its Jarkessy v. SEC ruling, and while the Supreme Court declined last summer to address nondelegation directly, it upheld Jarkessy as a whole. Expect more soon.


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Trump’s move also brings into question Congress’s unconstitutional restriction of the President’s executive authority, as upheld in New Deal-era judicial precedents like Humphrey’s Executor v. United States (1935). Humphrey’s Executor upheld Congress’s restrictions on the President’s ability to remove independent agency heads. The Supreme Court’s 2020 Seila Law v. CFPB and 2021 Collins v. Yellen rulings chipped away at this by declaring Congress’s “for cause” removal restrictions on agency heads unconstitutional. But obviously, for “all executive power to be vested in the President”, the President must have power to fire any government employee for any reason.

In the meantime, President Trump isn’t waiting for the courts, understanding perfectly well what Democrat pundits have long denied: that all three branches have equal power and duty to enforce the Constitution.

Consider his executive order requiring independent agencies to submit all proposed regulations to the White House for review. Agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) have long functioned as quasi-legislative bodies with executive power, yet without accountability to the President and thus to the voters.

Trump’s move strips away the fiction of their independence and forces them back under presidential authority. The resulting lawsuits will likely set the stage for the Supreme Court to reexamine the constitutionality of these agencies’ — and countless others’ — very existence.

The President’s order also exposes the myth that these so-called independent agencies were ever truly “nonpartisan”. When Barack Obama pushed for net neutrality, his FCC chair Tom Wheeler dutifully complied. When Joe Biden nudged the FTC to consider banning non-compete agreements, it jumped to attention. These agencies have always been political instruments for exactly one party. They only “resist” Republicans, which is another way of saying that they exist to resist elections.

The Impoundment Challenge

Trump’s next battle is likely to be over presidential impoundment — the ability to decline to spend Congress’s full appropriations. Though he has so far merely paused Biden-era spending, he has signaled that he may challenge the constitutionality of laws restricting this power. The Impoundment Control Act of 1974 — an effort by Democrats to thwart a weakend Richard Nixon — was designed to neuter the executive branch’s ability to resist congressional overspending.

A successful challenge to the Impoundment Control Act could fundamentally alter the balance of power in Washington and dramatically reduce the national debt. Congress has long relied on its ability to dictate spending through massive omnibus bills and earmarks, tying the hands of presidents who might otherwise choose to rein in unnecessary expenditures. By reviving impoundment authority, Trump could restore an essential tool for fiscal discipline and executive discretion.

Elon Musk’s “deletion” of fraudulent spending and DEI budgets is sure to provoke the legal challenges needed to put the Impoundment Control Act on the ash heap of history. In this as in so many other areas, Trump is forcing Democrats to defend the indefensible.

Constitutional Reckoning

But it all comes back accountability: can voters make meaningful changes, and do elections matter? Bureaucrats who dictate economic and social policy should not be shielded from the elected executive. Congress still holds the power of the purse, oversight authority, and the ability to confirm nominees. Trump’s consolidation of executive power will help force Congress to actually legislate, instead of ducking its own accountability by delegating vast authority to unelected agencies. The Supreme Court could see to that once-and-for-all, by re-establishing nondelegation doctrine.

Ultimately, Trump’s “constitutional cleanup” (as Kim Strassel put it last week) is forcing long-dormant questions back into the national conversation. Can Congress create agencies that exercise executive power but are free from executive oversight? Can the Administrative State continue to operate as an unchecked fourth branch of government? Can the courts continue to ignore the fundamental separation of powers violations that define modern governance?

If so, you don’t live in a Republic. Trump’s counterrevolution is about ending that unconstitutional regime, and restoring both the Constitution and the vision of the Founders.

If he succeeds, the result will be a leaner, more accountable government, one that operates within the confines of the Constitution and responds to the will of the voters at every election. If he loses, it will be because the Democrats’ entrenched bureaucracy, Enemedia, academic indoctrination camps, and judicial allies have once again suppressed the plain text of the Constitution.

When asked what kind of government the Founding Fathers had created at the Constitutional Convention, Benjamin Franklin replied, “A republic, ma’am, if you can keep it.” America has not kept it for a century. It’s long past time to restore what’s been lost.

https://www.rodmartin.org/p/elections-have-to-matter-independent


ccp

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A lot of excellent points in reply 425 and 426 posts
« Reply #427 on: March 02, 2025, 08:56:33 AM »
a good enlightening read for anyone who does not understand the entrenched power and corruption of the bureaucracy.

interesting how we keep hearing how Clinton reduced the Fed workforce by 388K  and yet the bureaucracy simply did a run around and contracted private entities to do the same or even more to the tune of 1,000,000 people.

the bureaucracy must be LOL -  gov worker gets fired or laid off etc.  then goes to private company or sets self up as private contractor - gets rehired but simply no directly by Feds and does same work and probably charges more  -= >   :x

so absurd.