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Is there a deep state?: Deep state critics

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New to politics

The pattern

Comey briefed Trump. CNN reported the briefing existed. BuzzFeed published the dossier. That is not a conspiracy theory. That is a communications strategy.

Peter Strzok texted about an insurance policy. McCabe authorized a leak and lied about it. The FISA court received applications the FBI knew were flawed. Seventeen errors, every one in the direction of maintaining surveillance, zero protecting the target’s civil liberties. The inspector general called them errors. We call them a pattern.

The term deep state bothers people because it sounds paranoid. We would prefer a term that sounds administrative, because the phenomenon is administrative. Career officials develop institutional preferences. When a president threatens those preferences, the bureaucracy has tools: strategic leaks, procedural delays timed to outlast appointees, selective enforcement. When Trump ordered troops from Syria, defense officials slow-walked it. When career diplomats testified during impeachment, the institutional defenders called it patriotism. A foreign service officer substituting her judgment for the president’s directive is not patriotism. It is bureaucratic insurrection dressed in credentials.

The structural analysts frame this as inevitable. We agree with the diagnosis. We do not agree that inevitability is an excuse. Seventy-seven million voted in 2024 for the candidate who named this problem.

The reformers want redesign. So do we — as long as redesign means the elected president’s lawful orders are carried out by the people he is supposed to command.

Where we concede ground: We let the term get captured by its worst users. A congressman calling a GS-9 processing disability claims deep state eats the concept.

What would change our mind: Three transitions producing no evidence of career officials undermining lawful presidential directives.


Read the full synthesis: Is there a deep state?

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