President Donald Trump understands the simple formula for ensuring the government does a better job of serving Main Street: you move it there.
Following Trump’s April executive order on restoring common-sense office management, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced last month that her department will relocate more than half of its D.C. workforce into the communities it primarily serves. New USDA hubs will open in Utah, Colorado, Indiana, Missouri, and North Carolina.
This strategy is not just a shuffling of desks. It is a correction to a long-standing imbalance that concentrated power in Washington and left the rest of America as an afterthought.
Rollins says the realignment will re-center USDA on its core mission of serving farmers, ranchers, foresters, and rural communities. The urgency of this reorganization comes after the Biden administration “[grew the workforce] by eight percent, and employees’ salaries increased by 14.5 percent – including hiring thousands of employees with no sustainable way to pay them,” she said.
The change promises better service, lower overhead, and faster decisions. It also promises something Washington rarely delivers: accountability. When public servants live and work near the people who depend on their services, excuses get harder and results get better.
For years, federal agencies have operated far from the families, small businesses, and seniors who need timely answers. Distance breeds delay and groupthink. A capital city culture that talks mostly to itself cannot understand the daily realities of planting seasons, water rights, grazing permits, or disaster recovery after a bad storm. Moving USDA closer to those realities will improve the work the agency does because it forces bureaucrats to meet real needs.
No longer will farmers be distant afterthoughts for USDA bureaucrats – they will be those bureaucrats’ neighbors and friends.
Additionally, a lower cost of living outside Washington stretches tax dollars and retirement dollars further. Every dollar not wasted on premium D.C. office space is a dollar that can support county field offices, veteran farmers, rural broadband mapping, food safety inspections, and emergency response for droughts and wildfires. Savings and service go together when agencies operate where the work actually happens.
Relocation also widens the talent pipeline. Many of America’s best agricultural minds live west of the Potomac. They raise cattle, cultivate crops, restore forests, and run research labs in the heartland. They often rule out federal service because it requires uprooting families to move to D.C. Opening regional offices removes that barrier and encourages more real-world expertise in public service.
Democrats call this move political. What they really object to is losing a monopoly on influence. For decades, the bureaucracy has grown by centralizing authority in one city. That approach produced bloated rules, slow responses, and little regard for local conditions. President Trump’s approach restores balance. It puts decision-makers near the people who must live with those decisions. That is what federalism looks like in practice.
The logic applies beyond USDA. Interior, Transportation, Education, and other federal agencies could all improve services by placing more jobs and authority where their programs touch real communities. Interior should keep more land managers in the West. Transportation should center safety and permitting staff along freight corridors and growing metros. Education should build relationships with parents, school boards, and state leaders instead of dictating from afar. When agencies are present, they listen. When they listen, they spend better and regulate less.
This logistical reform is part of a larger promise. President Trump pledged to return power to the people and make government leaner and more accountable. Moving agencies out of Washington turns that promise into measurable change. It trims costs without cutting corners. It breaks up the echo chamber that fuels mission creep. It replaces ideology with results.
The media backlash reveals how overdue this shift is. Insiders defend the status quo because the status quo serves insiders. Everyday Americans want something different. They want competence, fairness, and value for their tax dollars. They want a government that works where they live.
Secretary Rollins deserves credit for initiating a complex transition with a clear mission. The vision, however, belongs to President Trump. This is conservative governance at work: less bureaucracy, more accountability, and services delivered closer to the people who pay for them.
A government of the people should not hide behind a Beltway address. It should stand where Americans farm, build, study, worship, and retire. The USDA relocation is a model for that kind of government. It replaces distance with duty and talk with results. The work has begun, and it should continue across all federal agencies.
W.J. Lee has served in the White House, NASA, on multiple political campaigns, and in nearly all levels of government. In his free time, he enjoys the “three R’s” – reading, running, and writing.

The happy smile mask has slipped off the evil face of the bureaucratic deep state.
If this what the left claims “saving democracy” looks like, it’s time for the people to save it from them.
We the People must stand up now.
Distrust in the system is growing—and for good reason.
When the entire left fights elections, not at the ballot box but in courtrooms and deep state manipulations, it betrays democratic norms.
The choice is clear: no more silent complicity. It’s time for reasonable people to abandon the democrat deep state as a governing force because it continues to subvert the vote of every American.
Encourage your community: speak out, resign membership, vote based on principles, not partisanship.
If lawfare and deep state tactics become acceptable, we lose self-government altogether.
This Republic doesn’t survive by muzzling opponents or co-opting agencies.
The rule of law must prevail for the survival of our freedom. We cannot let deception win.
History, including scripture, warns about internal decay. Proverbs 29:2 says, “When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked bear rule, the people mourn.”
If political power is wielded unjustly—from legal frameworks or hidden bureaucracy—Godly standards our republic was founded in are compromised.
The remedy is two-fold: refuse to fuel the machinery of corruption, and rebuild civic integrity from the ground up.
Finally a common sense . Place the agency where the action is . It is the central planning and the incompetence of the planners that cripples the economy and innovation. Washington has been doing everything except that which is it’s responsibility and duty to the country. Time it resumed it’s only duties and stick to them. Surprise surprise. I can hear howling and screaming.
Excellent move to be taking.
Good move to help break up the deep state bureaucracy.
I’ve thought for decades that the seat of the federal government should be moved to the middle of the country somewhere, maybe in Kansas or around there.
Don’t stop with the USDA, drain the swamp.
Mr. President Trump please finish the job with all the Federal bureaucrats titles of relocation in all other states as well!
Great job Mr. President Trump keep up the pace of Federal accountability to its constituents, The Taxpayers!
If liberals and the Pravda lamestream media are having a meltdown over requiring government to serve the people, then President Trump is obviously pushing his America-First agenda forward, and I LOVE watching the snowflakes throw their tantrums. MAGA!!!
Move the entire government! Put the capital in the middle of the country, far from the vile swamp and disperse all the departments across the land.
They used to need physical access to things in D.C which can now be facilitated via electronic media. No reason to be in DC for farmers etc. now
Move Depts here:
Ag Dept: Iowa
Interior; CO WY
NOAA: CA HI VA FL
FBI mationwide
NASA: CA FL AL CO MT
SBA: nationwide
SS nationwide
VA nationwide
Personally, I would like to see Both the House and Senate seating Alphabetically. No more “this side and that side. They BOTH are acting like Kindergarteners so start treating them as such. I would also like to see a “One Item for ONE bill”.
Seems like a good plan!
EXCELLENT ARTIICLE! Put term limits on all elected officials and all bureaucrats.
Yes! It’s good to be spread out and not in one place. However, there still has to be one leader of the department, which shouldn’t be a problem given our communication systems.
I have long contended that the “government” – House, Senate and President – should be relocated to Smith County, Kansas – the geographic center of the US. Turn DC into something like DIsneyland, a tourist attraction. Leave a lot of the “satellite” agencies, alphabet agencies and the Pentagon where they are. It would be especially shocking to the many bureaucrats who have been in DC forever and don’t know what America is really like.
maybe we should move the capital of the U S to the geographical center of the country!
this would require an AMENDMENT to the constitution.
the PEOPLE would become involved!
Hopefully, if enough agency bureaucrats are dispersed across the nation their combined voting power in Virginia will be diluted to the point Virginia, once again, becomes a red state. Scattering them across the nation must be done in a way as to minimize their effect on the electorate of the various states they are moved too. Concentrating agencies in one area, like DC, allows the bureaucrats to have too much local political power.
This is logical and efficient. Naturally that makes it anathema to lifelong bureaucrats. When your hiring pool is primarily the locals in the DC/Baltimore area you end up with that area’s mindset in charge. Good moving the agencies out of there.
This only makes sense. And as the Dept of Education already has 50 departments of education (one in each state), dissolve the one that’s located in D.C. It has been nothing but a paper pusher for decades.
Yee-Haaa!!!! and hire people who have done the job. How many administrators at FMCSA has made a living driving a big rig cross country. apply that to all the agencies, then maybe the bureaucracy will make some sense.
i like his idea of 15 brand new cities across the country. maybe each built as one element of our federal gov.
Send them all to NYC. Lots of empty office space! Lots of parking! And an election coming up! Make yourselves at home!!!
DOGE would more likely recommend Artificial Intelligence doing lots of the work. Relocating would likely increase costs.