by Dan Mitchell | Oct 1, 2025 | Big Government, Blogs
In 2013, during a political squabble over a previous government shutdown, here’s some of what I wrote. …in my libertarian fantasy world, we leave it closed. Or at least we never bother to reopen counterproductive bureaucracies such as the Department of...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 24, 2019 | Blogs, Economics
I don’t care about the current shutdown battle, but I still feel compelled to add my two cents when people make silly arguments about the economy suffering because government is temporarily spending less money. This is actually a two-part debate. From a microeconomic...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 18, 2019 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending
I cared a lot about the 1995-96 shutdown and the 2013 shutdown because those were battles involving the size and scope of government. But I don’t have a dog in the current fight over immigration and border security. That being said, I told Neil Cavuto that there are...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 4, 2019 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending
I’ve previously explained why I don’t have a dog in the current shutdown fight in Washington. Simply stated, Trump isn’t fighting to make government smaller. Instead he wants more spending for a wall and isn’t even proposing some offsetting reductions to keep...
by Dan Mitchell | May 26, 2017 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending
In this interview with Dana Loesch, I make several points about the Trump budget, including the need to reform means-tested entitlements and Obamacare (with a caveat from my Second Theorem of government), as well as some comments on foreign aid and fake budget cuts....