Two Important Reads Re The Administrative State
"Administrative State" is the term that political scientists use to describe the bureaucratized government that we have, in which the unelected permanent bureaucracy--lodged in the Executive Branch--increasingly takes over the functions of the Legislative Branch, which in the constitutional scheme of things was supposed to represent We The People. The result of the empowerment of supposed "experts" in the permanent bureaucracy is that neither Congress nor even presidents or cabinets secretaries are able to exercise true authority over the government. Never, perhaps, in the last hundred and more odd years of the Administrative State's development in America has the full power of the Administrative State--in opposition to all three constitutional branches of government--been more apparent than during the four years of the Trump administration.
The two scholars most associated with the critique of the Administrative State are John Marini, a political science professor, and Philip Hamburger, a law professor.
Marini's best known book on the subject is Unmasking the Administrative State: The Crisis of American Politics in the Twenty-First Century . Writing from a more strictly legal standpoint, Hamburger's major work is Is Administrative Law Unlawful?
However, if you're short of time, I'm linking two articles--actually, an interview with Marini and a review of his book--that will give you a very clear idea of what's at stake in all this.
The review of Marini's book can be found here:
I'll only excerpt a few paragraphs from the review. I chose these paragraphs because they discuss what I've regularly referenced--the influence of Hegelian philosophy over the American Progressive Movement, which includes (among names most will recognize) John Dewey and Woodrow Wilson:
Marini traces the establishment of the modern administrative state in the United States, in large part, back to President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “reinterpretation” of the Constitution when his administration, supported by Congress, launched the New Deal programs.[11] In a September 1932 speech, President Roosevelt asserted that the relationship of the government to the people was essentially contractual—“rulers were accorded power, and the people consented to that power on consideration that they be accorded certain rights.”[12] That formulation enabled the government to determine the conditions of a new social compact, which diminished the authority of the Constitution and undermined popular sovereignty.[13] This new understanding of the government as the “arbiter” of both economic and political rights enabled the government to place the expertise of the bureaucracy in charge of policymaking, thereby replacing the “moral authority of the people’s compact.”[14]
Roosevelt’s political triumph had been preceded by decades of Progressive thinking that posited that rights were not natural or individual in origin, but instead were based in societal norms.[15] The noted philosopher John Dewey criticized the founders for their belief that liberty is derived from natural rights, arguing that their understandings were “historically conditioned” and did not take into account the idea of “historic relativity.”[16] In 1917, the eminent legal scholar Roscoe Pound observed that modern legal philosophy asked for “a definite, deliberate, juristic program as part of an intelligent social program, and expects that program to take account of the maximum of human demands and to strive to secure the maximum of human wants.”[17]
American Progressivism, Marini contends, was the “political manifestation of a theoretical revolution in political thought,” derived ultimately from a “philosophy of History.”[18] The German philosopher Immanuel Kant argued that the moral law could not be established on natural law or natural rights.[19] Progressive intellectuals like Woodrow Wilson understood “natural laws only in terms of science, not ethics or morality,” and they concluded that the founders’ reliance on natural law principles was obsolete and had been superseded by scientific progress.[20] The Progressives, influenced by German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, also concluded that the modern state would become the vehicle for progress, with politics and religion replaced by the rational science of economics and society.[21] American Progressive political scientists believed, like their European counterparts, in a theory of social justice under which the government would provide political solutions to contemporary social and economic problems.[22]
That should ring a few bells, I hope. The rest of the review then contrasts these Progressive views--which led directly to the enablement of a professional class of governing 'experts' who are largely unaccountable--with the views of the Founding Fathers. It's a most illuminating discussion.
The interview with Marini can be found in transcript here:
Unmasking the Administrative State
John Marini on the Real Crisis of American Politics
I think you'll find the discussion--it's a true back and forth between the interviewer (Bob Zadek) and Marini--quite accessible, especially since the discussion takes place in the context of the Trump administration and Trump's relationship to the Administrative State. With that in mind, I'll simply quote Marini's concluding response, which is an interesting appraisal of Trump coming from an academic. What Marini is saying about Trump is that Trump envisioned himself as a politician in the broadest sense--as the representative of We The People in ministering to the health of the body politic, the constitutional order. While Trump presented himself to the citizenry as someone with a policy agenda, he was not presenting himself as simply a manager to preside over the bureacracy, to help government run more efficiently. His was a true political vision of American Greatness:
Donald Trump: A Citizen President
Bob Zadek : You have such an original view of the Trump administration and its role on the administrative state. I know I’m asking for a lot in a very short period of time, but summarize, the relationship of the Trump administration with all of its warts and calluses and problems of style. Tell us about how it has affected the administrative state and whether that type of orientation, offers promise.
John Marini: I think the thing that Trump saw, and perhaps he saw it better than most because he didn’t come out of the environment of government, was that when he ran for office, the goal was political. He wanted to actually mobilize the majority to go to the electorate and tell him what they wanted to do. If they wanted him to do it he would actually do it. That has been very rare in American politics in the last 40 or 50 years. So he actually begins from the perspective of a citizen rather than from the perspective of somebody who has established a kind of profession of government. Instead of thinking about government as a profession.
Trump is a threat to Washington because he takes politics seriously in a way in which many of those previously elected have not. They think that you could simply mobilize groups and keep groups divided, and you don’t have to look out for the interest of the whole, for the common good of the citizens. Trump is the first to look out for the common good.
Bob Zadek : So, Trump is the first “citizen President” we’ve had in quite some time. Kind of interesting. John, thank you so much.
I believe that's a fair assessment. It also explains the Trumpean appeal--voters saw that he was looking out for the common good because he continually articulated, in readily understandable terms, what he saw as the common good. And, unlike most elected officials, he followed through on that vision to the best of his ability.
This is a difference that I think the American people will not soon forget. The American people understand the difference between a Trump and a power elite that sees their first day priority as putting American energy workers out of their jobs and empowering boys who want to play at being girls. For starters.