New from me: How the Biden administration is reducing administrative burdens both for public services - health care access, rental assistance, student loan forgiveness - and our interactions with private companies.
donmoynihan.substack.com/p/the-biden-ad…
Much of what Biden is doing is reversing the increase of administrative burdens under the Trump admin. In health care, this means reinvigorating the Navigator program to enhance outreach and rolling back work requirements. 2/
Getting money out the door for an intergovernmental rental assistance program has been a big problem. Gene Sperling sped things up partly by encouraging states and localities to use self-attestation in place of detailed documentation requirements. 3/
On student loans, Biden has resisted calls for mass forgiveness. Instead, he has taken the student loan forgiveness programs that already exist and worked to make them actually function. This has resulted in billions in student loan forgiveness. 4/ donmoynihan.substack.com/p/the-biden-ad…
Its possible for the federal government to not just reduce burdens in public services, but regulate how private companies use burdens to take advantage of customers. For example, think of how easy it is to sign up for a magazine subscription, and how hard it is to cancel. 5/
You probably haven't heard of the ways the Biden admin is reducing burdens which reflects both a messaging problem and opportunity. How do progressives build a coherent narrative where good government fixes resonate in an era of dysfunctional populism? 6/ donmoynihan.substack.com/p/the-biden-ad…
This piece is a sequel to a previous post that lays out the broader philosophy emerging from the Biden admin. Its hard to get much attention to in-the-weeds accounts of government improvement, so please amplify and consider subscribing to my newsletter! 7/
donmoynihan.substack.com/p/the-biden-ad…

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More from @donmoyn

2 Dec
The pandemic has shown that teleworking can work for all sorts of organizations with employees performing all sorts of tasks.
Given the costs of the DC region, teleworking represents a real opportunity for the federal govt to recruit talented people who want to live elsewhere.
Its weird that someone from AEI would voice opposition to remote work since the AEI line on this has been that remote work is good, even for government.
TBF, here are Biggs arguments.

Most federal work is professional white collar work, which is exactly they type of work he does from Oregon. People notice if you miss deadlines, can't carry out assigned tasks, and not working with your team. aei.org/wp-content/upl…
Read 4 tweets
1 Dec
Panelists: the Johnson government wavering on a NI protocol they negotiated is largely signaling to Tory voters with the next election in mind. In one sense reassuring - they won’t abandon the protocol - but for how long can post-Brexit UK politicians run against EU?
.@RepBrendanBoyle: expects there will be a special US envoy to protect the Northern peace process. Notes that the blocking of foreign service appointments in the Senate is slowing things down.
A bit more on the reasons why foreign service appointments are not being filled, which is largely due to GOP pique, and has real consequences for US influence abroad including issues like the N. Ireland peace process
Read 4 tweets
28 Nov
It’s never really been about free speech, but about imposing their own speech.
UK conservatives took a page from the US, claiming there were “woke hate mobs” on campus to justify policing speech.
Now they are excluding experts whose speech they dislike from briefing the govt.
UK civil servants have been warned to screen potential speakers at Whitehall events for any comments critical of government policies and exclude them on that basis. thenational.scot/news/19747206.…
When I was in the UK in 2018-2019, I was invited to give talks to Whitehall officials a couple of times about my research. Under this new guidance the inviter would be obliged to check my social media and would exclude me on that basis for my comments critical of Brexit.
Read 5 tweets
27 Nov
Government as a means of personal enrichment, not public service. Kushner began his government career selling real estate by promising big Chinese investors US visas. His current gig is shaking down Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds. nytimes.com/2021/11/26/us/…
No sane person would give Kushner money based on his actual business record, which is terrible.
So what is Kushner selling? The promise of political influence. Governments who did not back Kushner’s failed businesses before believe they were punished, and are worried about a second Trump administration. Their worries are not unfounded.
Read 5 tweets
23 Nov
We only hear about government administration when things go wrong.
So here's something positive you haven't heard about: the Biden admin is working to reduce the administrative burdens that government imposes on the public.

New from me:
donmoynihan.substack.com/p/the-biden-ad…
You can't find a single speech where Biden talks about administrative burdens. But its embedded in a series of policy documents: his equity executive order, internal OMB guidance to agencies, a public OMB report to the President, and the new President's Management Agenda.
There are lots of wonks in specific policy domains doing this work. So what's the value of articulating an overall administrative philosophy to reduce burdens?
It helps to increase salience, legibility and knowledge dissemination of the topic. donmoynihan.substack.com/p/the-biden-ad…
Read 4 tweets
19 Nov
This piece lays out the roadmap for how Republicans in Wisconsin continue to move further toward competitive authoritarianism. Increasingly likely that even if Democrats win the most votes, the gerrymandered legislature will overturn the outcome. 1/ nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/…
I say "move further toward competitive authoritarianism" because Wisconsin Republicans have already moved away from a reasonably fair democracy. Most of it occurred very quickly, in the last decade. No punishment for this slide, no reason to think it will stop. 2/ Image
Starting in 2010, you have perhaps the most efficient gerrymander in the country, one that essentially guarantees that Republicans cannot lose the legislature, regardless of their action. SCOTUS could have intervened, but Kennedy punted. Green light for more of this. 3/ ImageImage
Read 10 tweets

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