The Washington Post notes the following quote from Rep. Paul Ryan in his CPAC speech:

“We don’t see the debt as an excuse to cut with abandon, to shirk our obligations,” Ryan said. “We see it as an opportunity to reform government, to make it cleaner and more effective. That’s what conservatives stand for.”

That’s interesting because more effective (or efficient) government is also what liberals stand for.

As I wrote upon the release of Ryan’s latest budget proposal, more efficient government isn’t the same as limited government. I appreciate the argument being made by some limited-government advocates that Ryan’s budget is a “step in the right direction” because it would slow the growth in federal spending versus the Congressional Budget Office’s baseline. That’s a good thing—especially when compared to the bloated alternative put out by Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA). But I think that proponents of limited government should consider a “step in the right direction” to be a budget that actually attempts to extricate the federal government from involvement in every facet of our lives. In that regard, Ryan’s budget only represents a step toward a slightly cheaper big government.

Note: Check out Veronique de Rugy’s commentary on the SKILLS Act for an example of what I’m talking about.

Why I’m Not a Conservative (Cato Institute) / CC BY-NC-SA 3.0