Project 2025 Status
Chapter Author
former Secretary of the US Department of Housing and Urban Development
The chapter on HUD presents a familiar conservative vision:
Carson opens Chapter 15 with a proposed reorientation of the department’s mission: the problem with HUD, he states, is that it has promoted the concept of “bureaucratically provided housing as a basic life need and, whether intentionally or not, fail[s] to acknowledge that these public benefits too often have led to intergenerational poverty traps, have implicitly penalized family formation in traditional two-parent marriages, and have discouraged work and income growth, thereby limiting upward mobility.”
HUD’s work is thus related to that of other departments in its goals of promoting economic self-reliance and the importance of the two-parent family. To reflect these goals, HUD would need to be restructured: a cadre of political appointees would execute this plan, and a Chief Financial Officer would be hired from the business world (as was previously done) to reform spending.
The first goal of a proposed HUD review would be to reconsider HUD’s proper role in the housing market. More responsibility for housing matters should be shifted to the states and localities as well as other government agencies, eventually turning many of HUD’s current responsibilities over to them. On Day One of a Conservative presidency, an immediate sweeping reform and paring down of HUD’s mission would be enacted.
Carson identifies the obstacle as “the mission creep that inevitably occurs when Congress delegates power to an empowered and unelected bureaucracy that is insulated by civil service protections.”
If implemented, the proposed reforms he discusses can help a new conservative Administration to use its Article II powers to rectify bureaucratic overreach, reverse the expansion of programs beyond their statutory authority, and end progressive policies that have been put in place at the department.
Here, too, the replacement of civil service employees with political appointees is vital to HUD restructuring. The first goal of loyalist appointees would be to “identify and reverse all actions taken by the Biden Administration to advance progressive ideology,” including any climate change initiatives.
Certain principles would guide new policy: