Pillar X: Fight Government Corruption by Draining the Swamp

Move Federal Agencies and Decision-Making Closer to the People

To many Americans, the federal government feels distant and out of touch. Indeed, Washington policymakers and federal bureaucrats inhabit a different world from most Americans. The Washington, D.C., metropolitan area exists in a bubble largely insulated from forces affecting the rest of the country. Federal spending drives the Washington economy, and federal jobs or related positions—such as lobbying or federal contracting—dominate both the Washington job market and social scene. Federal employees also make on average one-sixth more than comparable private sector workers. And five of the seven wealthiest counties (or county-equivalents) in the U.S. are located in the Washington metropolitan area.

Washington bureaucrats make decisions affecting the entire country, but many of them are socially and economically disconnected from the rest of the Nation. The people making federal policies often have little experience walking in the shoes of those who are affected by their decisions. As a result, the decisions they make often do not truly reflect the will of the American people.

Relocating federal agencies outside Washington would pierce this “beltway bubble.” Doing so would move agency leadership closer to the American people and into communities where they are not primarily surrounded by like-minded federal employees and contractors. During the Trump Administration, the U.S. Department of Agriculture successfully moved the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture from Washington, D.C., to Kansas City, Missouri, while the Department of Interior moved the Bureau of Land Management to Grand Junction, Colorado.

Relocating agencies would also save taxpayers a lot of money. The cost of living in the Washington metropolitan area ranks among the highest in the U.S. Highly paid federal employees, contractors, and lobbyists bid up housing prices as they compete for homes with shorter commutes into “the Federal City.” The federal government then pays its Washington employees premium wages to compensate for these higher living costs. By relocating 100,000 employees out of the Washington metropolitan area, the federal government would save more than $1 billion annually in locality pay.

The argument for keeping federal agencies concentrated in Washington has long been that they need to be physically present in the same city to coordinate with each other, the White House, and Congress. Modern teleworking technology, however, has eliminated this need. Three-fifths of federal employees telecommuted every day during the COVID-19 pandemic. Agencies continued to coordinate very effectively with each other and Congress while most of their employees worked remotely. This demonstrated that they can function equally effectively with employees working in other states.

The federal government should also move decision- making closer to the American people. The federal government currently regulates almost every aspect of Americans’ lives—crowding out the ability of individuals, communities, and states to make decisions themselves. But this was not the Founders’ original vision. Instead, they conceived of a federal government that would tackle only truly national responsibilities such as national defense or regulating interstate commerce.

However, the Supreme Court of the United States has interpreted federal authority to regulate interstate commerce very broadly, and it now includes matters that only tangentially affect interstate commerce. The federal government has consequently swelled from one of limited and enumerated powers to one with expansive authority to regulate every facet of Americans’ lives.

The federal government should return to the Framers’ vision. In the case of interstate commerce, Congress or the courts should restrict federal regulatory agencies’ jurisdiction to truly interstate economic activities. Regulation of matters that only indirectly affect interstate commerce should be left to states or local communities, which are better able to judge their unique needs.

THE FACTS

  • Federal employees enjoy 17% higher salary and benefits than comparable private sector workers.
  • 283,000 federal employees work in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.
  • The Washington metropolitan area contains five of the seven wealthiest counties and county-equivalents1 in the U.S.
    • Loudon County, Virginia (median household income of $147,100)
    • Falls Church City, Virginia (median household income of $146,900)
    • Fairfax County, Virginia (median household income of $127,900)
    • Howard County, Maryland (median household income of $124, 000) and
    • Arlington County, Virginia (median household income of $122,600).
  • The Washington metropolitan area has the fifth-highest cost of living out of 267 urban areas in the U.S.
  • Cost-of-living adjustments raise federal salaries in the
  • Washington metropolitan area to 13% higher than what federal employees earn in the rest of the U.S.
  • Relocating 100,000 federal jobs from the Washington metropolitan area to the rest of the U.S. would save taxpayers $1.4 billion per year in federal employee locality pay adjustments.

THE AMERICA FIRST AGENDA

At the federal level, support policies that:

  • Broadly relocate federal cabinet departments and their sub-agencies across the U.S.
    • This effort should have a particular focus on relocating to areas with low living costs.
  • In the alternative, unilaterally relocate agency subcomponents employing at least 100,000 federal employees, if necessary, by using presidential authority.
    • This would include relocating the FBI headquarters and IRS headquarters.
  • Federal regulatory agencies’ jurisdiction should be restricted to truly interstate economic activity.

REFERENCES

Annual Average 2021 Cost of Living Index Released, The Council for Community and Economic Research (March 2022).

Comparing the Compensation of Federal and Private-Sector Employees, 2011-2015, Congressional Budget Office (April 2017).

How and Why the Trump Administration Deregulated by David Bernhardt, America First Policy Institute (May 2021).

Income in the Past 12 Months, United States Census Bureau, American Community Survey 2016-2020, 5-Year Estimates Subject Tables.

Major Work Locations of the Executive Branch, Fiscal Year 2017, U.S. Office of Personnel Management (Feb. 2018).