America’s Bureaucracy Crisis

Posted on Thursday, March 26, 2026
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by Robert B. Charles
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FED, Federal Reserve with interest rate cut concept, small cube block with alphabet building the word CUT next to Federal Reserve emblem on US Dollar banknote

The list of US Government departments and agencies numbers over 1000. Within that list are huge departments – Defense, State, Justice, and HHS – which themselves have countless bureaus, thousands of programs, employees, and contractors. Accountability is a mounting crisis.

From the days of Ronald Reagan’s “Grace Commission” to President Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency,” the plague of unaccountable federal bureaucrats has been growing.

Nor is the plague just federal. States – especially those that overtax, overspend, and effectively buy votes with bureaucratic giveaways – are cesspools of politically-motivated waste, fraud, and abuse.

While numbers are slippery, especially when talking about bureaucratic failure, the Foundation for Government Accountability estimates that the federal bureaucracy alone costs Americans three trillion dollars annually, that’s a three with twelve zeroes behind it.

State bureaucracy is just as bad, sometimes worse, depending on the level and duration of one-party control, the amount of graft, unaccounted public corruption, and “normalized” illegality.

Even if every political actor and bureaucrat were honest, the multiplier effect – or amount of damage done – by large state bureaucracies to the state’s taxpayers and citizens is enormous.

As reported by the Foundation, “In 2023, there were 19.5 million state and local government employees nationwide, with 5.3 million employed by a state government and 14.2 million employed by a local government,” their wages alone topping $1.23 trillion.

State by state, the cost of bureaucracy – which grows year on year, decade on decade, without serious oversight, focus on limiting government, and conscientious downsizing – is outsized.

In Republican-run South Dakota, which has 65,000 state and local employees, the direct cost is $2.7 billion. That is a marked increase from the past, but Democrat states personify bloat.

In Democrat-run Maine, the state budget is exploding with bureaucrats, a disproportionate number in Health and Human Services and Education, administrators multiplying like rabbits. The state has – by comparison – 90,000 bureaucrats at a cost of $4.3 billion. That is suffocating in a poor state. 

Using Maine as one example of state bureaucratic bloat, the enacted budget increased 61 percent in seven years under Maine’s Democrat governor, from $7.22 to $11.63, while total state spending (including federal funds) hit $14.5 billion in FY2026, up 65 percent from $8.8 billion in FY2019.

In larger Democrat states, the crisis is only amplified. New York’s state bureaucracy tops 1.3 billion bureaucrats, costing $101.5 billion, while California tops 2.28 million and costs $185 billion.

The point – coast to coast – is that bureaucracy lives to grow itself, and the adverse impact is both direct and indirect. The direct cost to taxpayers is high, as their taxes rise to match spending on government, but higher with unaccountability, non-responsiveness, and mass frustration.

These costs are compounded in states like California, New York, Minnesota, and Maine – when public corruption is added to the mix, rewarding graft, twisting elections, and normalizing fraud.

Bottom line: At the federal and state levels, we face a bureaucracy crisis, excess government spending on government, little oversight, and high taxpayer frustration. Unless leaders cut waste, fraud, and abuse, it will only get worse.  Between the bloat, corruption, high property, income, and sales taxes, something has to give. Indications are that, in 2026, frustrated voters are going to fix this mess.

Robert Charles is a former Assistant Secretary of State under Colin Powell, former Reagan and Bush 41 White House staffer, Maine attorney, ten-year naval intelligence officer (USNR), and 25-year businessman. He wrote “Narcotics and Terrorism” (2003), “Eagles and Evergreens” (North Country Press, 2018), and “Cherish America: Stories of Courage, Character, and Kindness” (Tower Publishing, 2024). He is the National Spokesman for AMAC. Today, he is running to be Maine’s next Governor (please visit BobbyforMaine.com to learn more)!

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