Commentary
In the fractious debates of 1787-88, as the ink dried on a proposed Constitution, a cadre of skeptics—now dubbed Anti-Federalists—peered through the haze of revolutionary optimism to glimpse a troubling future. These thinkers, often eclipsed by the Federalist triumvirate of Hamilton, Madison, and Jay, foresaw a centralized power prone to metastasizing beyond its bounds, birthing a bureaucracy that would dwarf the liberties it promised to protect. Today, in 2025, their prescience haunts us. Through a conservative lens—one rooted in limited government, individual sovereignty, and local accountability—the Anti-Federalists’ warnings illuminate the sprawling administrative state that dominates modern America. Their insights, once dismissed as alarmist, now demand a reckoning: have we built the very leviathan they feared, and can we still dismantle it?
Voices From the Margins
The Anti-Federalists were no monolith. Patrick Henry thundered against tyranny, George Mason insisted on a Bill of Rights, but lesser-known figures like Brutus, Federal Farmer, and Cato—pseudonyms cloaking men of intellect and principle—offered surgical critiques of centralized power’s trajectory. Brutus, likely New York’s Robert Yates, warned in 1787 that the Constitution’s “necessary and proper” clause was a Pandora’s box, granting Congress latitude to spawn an army of enforcers. Federal Farmer, possibly Richard Henry Lee, envisioned a distant republic reliant on a “numerous train” of officers, eroding the civic intimacy of small-scale governance. Cato, perhaps Governor George Clinton, foresaw an elite cadre wielding administrative might to entrench their dominance.These men weren’t anarchists; they cherished order but distrusted concentration. Drawing from Rome’s fall and Britain’s imperial overreach, they argued that power, once pooled, grows inexorably—often through unelected hands. Their defeat in 1788 didn’t silence their logic; it merely delayed its vindication.
The Administrative State: A Modern Echo
Fast forward to 2025, and the Anti-Federalists’ nightmare is our reality. The federal bureaucracy—over 2 million strong, excluding contractors—spans agencies from the IRS to the EPA, issuing rules that rival Congress in scope and impact. The Code of Federal Regulations, a labyrinth exceeding 180,000 pages, dwarfs the Constitution’s concise frame. This isn’t governance by consent; it’s rule by fiat, executed by technocrats insulated from the ballot box. Brutus’s elastic clause finds its heir in agency discretion—think the FDA’s sweeping mandates or the ATF’s shifting gun rules. Federal Farmer’s “numerous train” thrives in the Department of Homeland Security’s 240,000 employees, while Cato’s elite class mirrors the revolving door between corporate suites and regulatory posts.Conservatives, long champions of limited government, see this as betrayal of first principles. The Constitution was a compact of enumerated powers, not a blank check for administrative sprawl. Yet the 20th century—Progressivism’s zeal, the New Deal’s ambition, the Great Society’s reach—stretched that compact beyond recognition. Today, agencies don’t just enforce laws; they make them, judge them, and punish noncompliance, collapsing the separation of powers into a single, unaccountable fist. This isn’t hyperbole: the Supreme Court’s Chevron deference (until recently) let agencies interpret vague statutes, effectively legislating from cubicles in Washington.
A Conservative Critique With Teeth
From a conservative vantage, this bureaucratic overreach offends three core tenets: sovereignty, accountability, and subsidiarity. First, sovereignty rests with the people, not unelected mandarins. When the EPA dictates a farmer’s ditch-digging or the IRS audits with algorithmic zeal, individual agency erodes—replaced by a top-down edict antithetical to self-governance. Second, accountability demands that power answers to the governed. Yet agency heads, often careerists or industry transplants, face no electorate; their rules bypass the messy, democratic churn of Congress. Third, subsidiarity—the principle that decisions belong at the most local competent level—lies in tatters as states and towns bow to federal ukases on everything from education to emissions.This isn’t mere nostalgia for a simpler past. The administrative state’s complexity—lauded by progressives as a bulwark against modern woes—becomes its own justification, a self-perpetuating machine. Conservatives see a parallel to Parkinson’s Law: bureaucracy expands to fill the space allotted, then demands more. The result? A government too vast to be grasped, let alone checked, by the citizens it claims to serve.
Balance: The Federalist Rejoinder
Fairness compels a nod to the Federalists. Madison argued in 1788 that a strong union could tame factionalism; Hamilton saw vigor in a centralized executive. Their heirs today—defenders of the administrative state—contend it solves problems too big for states: climate change, pandemics, corporate excess. Without the CDC’s data or the SEC’s oversight, chaos might reign. This isn’t frivolous; a fragmented nation could falter in a globalized age.Yet the Anti-Federalists would counter: efficiency isn’t liberty. A government capable of mastering crises is also capable of mastering us. The Federalists trusted institutional checks—Congress, courts, elections—to curb excess. But when agencies dwarf those checks, wielding legislative, executive, and judicial roles in one, the balance tilts toward tyranny. Conservatives don’t deny the need for governance; they question who governs and how closely they’re watched.
A Path Forward: Reclaiming the Republic
The Anti-Federalists didn’t just diagnose—they hinted at remedies conservatives can refine. First, *reassert legislative primacy*. Congress must reclaim its lawmaking mantle, narrowing agency mandates with precision—no more “necessary and proper” ambiguity. A “Sunset Clause” could force regulations to expire unless renewed by elected hands, pruning the bureaucratic thicket. Second, *empower the states*. Federalism isn’t quaint; it’s a firewall. Devolve powers—like education or land use—to governors and legislatures who breathe the same air as their constituents. Third, *leverage technology for transparency*. Blockchain-ledgered rulemaking or AI-driven audits of agency budgets could expose waste and overreach, turning tools of control into tools of accountability.These aren’t utopian fixes but practical resets, echoing the Anti-Federalists’ call for proximity and restraint. Critics will cry gridlock or inefficiency. Conservatives reply: better a slow, free government than a swift, unmoored one.
The Stakes in 2025 and Beyond
As we stand in 2025, the administrative state isn’t a partisan bogeyman—it’s a structural crisis. Conservatives, wary of centralized power since Reagan’s “nine most terrifying words” (“I’m from the government, and I’m here to help”), find in the Anti-Federalists a historical ally. Their warnings resonate not because they were infallible—monarchy didn’t return—but because they grasped power’s nature: it swells unless confined.Looking to 2050, the stakes sharpen. A hyper-digital bureaucracy—AI enforcers, drone regulators, corporate-agency hybrids—could render citizens mere data points in a federal algorithm. Or we could heed Brutus, Federal Farmer, and Cato, forging a republic where power stays close, clear, and chained. REAL CLEAR HISTORY readers thrive on such reckonings, bridging past insight to present peril. The Anti-Federalists lost their battle but left us their map. It’s time we followed it—not to dismantle government, but to redeem it.
From RealClearWire
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.