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Will a Shutdown Finally Shrink Government?

Will a Shutdown Finally Shrink Government?

Published 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Description

This week, editors Peter SudermanKatherine Mangu-WardNick Gillespie, and Matt Welch discuss whether the impending government shutdown will actually rein in the federal bureaucracy. They consider whether there is anything to gain from a shutdown, how past shutdowns have played out, and whether the risk of growing executive power outweighs the risk of uncontrolled spending.

They also examine the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey and whether it's about retribution or substance, President Donald Trump's deployment of federal troops to Portland, and New York Mayor Eric Adams' decision to exit the mayoral race. A listener question prompts a conversation about cyclical theories of history and whether frameworks like The Fourth Turning help explain our current moment or merely provide the illusion of clarity.

 

0:00—Shutdown showdown and shrinking the government

9:24—Russell Vought and the growth of executive power

25:34—James Comey faces an indictment

31:38—Eric Adams drops out of NYC mayoral race

40:42—Listener question on cyclical frameworks in history

48:06—Trump sends federal police to Portland

56:30—Weekly cultural recommendations

 

Mentioned in This Podcast

"Government Set To Shut Down Tomorrow," by Liz Wolfe

"The American New Right Looks Like the European Old Right," by Jack Nicastro and Phillip W. Magness

"How GOP Fiscal Sanity Died, in 7 Easy Steps," by Matt Welch

"Shutdown Highlights Basic Fact: Most of Government is 'Non-Essential'," by Nick Gillespie

"The Libertarian Case for Postmodernism," by Nick Gillespie

"In Trump's Tussle With James Comey, You Should Hope Everybody Loses," by J.D. Tuccille

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