TheOtherView
Opinions from around the country
It's
not read my lips, no new taxes this time,
but Bush's claim to reduce big government is just as
deceptive and false as the elder Bush's failed promise.
After campaign rhetoric promising Republican-friendly
government-reducing strategies, the Bush administration
has helped the government expand to the largest it's
been since the end of the Cold War, according to a new
study released by the Brookings Institution's Center
for Public Service.
In 2002, about 12.1 million people worked for the federal
government, more than at any other time since 12.6 million
in 1990.
After Sept. 11, most of the increases have been in defense.
A prime example is the increase in airline security.
The creation of the new Transportation Security Administration
within the Department of Transportation made government
employees of civilian airport workers.
However, other non-defense federal departments have
expanded through private outsourcing. About 8 million
of the 12.1 million federal employees worked for government
contractors and organizations that received government
grants.
Increases in the federal workforce are not bad. Jobs
are created from these expansions, but when government
expansion comes from private outsourcing, there is less
accountability to taxpayers and customers.
When politicians and analysts look at the growth of
government, many times contract workers are not included,
even though their paychecks come from public resources.
When revenue for these resources is shrinking because
of tax cuts, where will the money for paying these contract
workers come from?
Directly from the pocketbooks of our children and grandchildren,
as the federal deficit continues to grow.
At last count, there were still nine members of the
Supreme Court, 100 senators and 435 representatives.
The core of our government isn't growing, and our military
isn't increasing in size, at least not dramatically.
The IRS doesn't have thousands of auditors getting hired
by the day. Where are all these jobs going?
It can't work effectively both ways. A bigger government,
whether the Bush administration cares to admit it or
not, requires a huge amount of revenue.
The American public needs a show of honesty and responsibility
from their president, and it doesn't appear to be coming
any time soon.
This
is a staff editorial from the Iowa State Daily at Iowa
State University.
This editorial was distributed by U-Wire.
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