Turn USPS Into The Federal Mail Exchange And Stop The Bleeding

- June 7, 2026
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President Donald Trump has granted a full and unconditional pardon to former Rep. Stephen Buyer, an Indiana Republican who spent nearly two years in prison after being convicted of insider trading. The pardon was signed Thursday and quietly disclosed by the White House over the weekend.

Buyer, who represented Indiana in Congress from 1993 to 2011, was convicted in 2023 on four counts of securities fraud stemming from trades linked to nonpublic information he obtained while working as a consultant after leaving office. Prosecutors said Buyer profited from stock purchases.

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When the United States Postal Service reported its fiscal year 2025 results, it did what it has done almost every year since 2007. It lost money. The official numbers tell a story everyone in Washington pretends not to understand. $80.5 billion in operating revenue, a $9.0 billion GAAP net loss, a $2.7 billion controllable loss, and an institution that has now accumulated $118 billion in cumulative red ink. Its $15 billion Treasury borrowing authority is maxed out. USPS itself has conceded a “significant systemic annual revenue and cost imbalance,” which is the polite, bureaucratic way of admitting that the entity cannot pay for what Congress requires it to do. The Government Accountability Office, hardly a hotbed of conservative thought, has gone further. It says there is a fundamental mismatch between the level of service Congress demands and the revenue the Postal Service can generate.

This is not a management problem. It is a category problem. We have asked one institution to be two incompatible things at once. It is supposed to behave like a business, and it is also supposed to maintain a uniformed federal workforce built for a vanished world of daily letter mail. The result is the worst of both arrangements. The Postal Service is too commercial to function as a pure public utility, and too bound by statute to function as a real business. The honest response is not another round of small reforms. The honest response is to admit that the institution we have was designed for a country that no longer exists, and to build something simpler in its place.

Call that new institution the Federal Mail Exchange. The Federal Mail Exchange would not be a delivery company. It would be a clearinghouse and a purchasing agency. It would collect postage, maintain the national address database, set mail standards, certify private delivery contractors, auction delivery territories, tender mail to the winning bidders, audit performance, handle undeliverable mail, claims, fraud, and security, and operate a small carrier of last resort only where no qualified contractor will bid. The actual sorting and physical delivery of mail to American homes would, in most places, be done by certified private carriers. The federal role would be to guarantee a floor of service, set the rules, and police the system. That is a job the federal government can actually do. Operating 31,000 retail outlets and tens of thousands of vehicles on daily rounds is not.

Consider the arithmetic of the existing mandate, because it explains why every “modernization” plan to date has failed. USPS reports 170.4 million delivery points. Current law requires delivery at least six days a week. Multiply 170.4 million addresses by roughly 312 delivery days and you get more than 53 billion address-day delivery opportunities each year. That is the obligation. The institution then handled about 108.7 billion mail pieces in fiscal year 2025. The ratio is dismal, roughly two pieces per address per delivery day on average, much of which is advertising mail that subsidizes the rest. We are running a daily nationwide letter network for a country that no longer writes daily letters. No reform that preserves daily delivery, a uniformed federal workforce, and uniform postage can square those numbers.

Now reset the floor. Suppose Congress rewrites the mandate so that every address is entitled to four routine mail deliveries per month, with no address going more than 10 calendar days without a basic mail drop. Multiply 170.4 million addresses by 48 delivery days and you get about 8.2 billion address-day delivery opportunities per year. That is roughly an 85% reduction in the delivery obligation. Costs would not fall by 85%, because sorting, address management, security, and rural exceptions remain. But the single biggest structural cost driver, the daily nationwide presence of vehicles and carriers in every neighborhood in America, would finally bend to the actual volume of mail. The average drop per address per delivery, batched across 48 monthly cycles, would rise to roughly 13 pieces. That is a mail delivery worth making. The current schedule sends carriers out chasing thin daily volume that simply does not justify the trip.

With the floor reset, postage can finally tell the truth. The new postage formula is straightforward. Postage equals the auction-cleared delivery price, plus the Federal Mail Exchange’s processing cost, plus a security and claims reserve, plus a regulated administrative fee. The auction-cleared delivery price is set by reverse auctions by ZIP code, route cluster, or county. Contractors bid to deliver the four monthly mail drops. The Exchange does not ask, “What does it cost you?” It asks, “Who can meet the standard at the lowest reliable price?” Contracts then carry teeth, including penalties for missed delivery windows, misdelivery, chain of custody failures, customer complaints, and failed delivery scans. There is nothing exotic in this design. USPS already uses Contract Delivery Service for parts of its existing network, and the Postal Service’s own Office of Inspector General lists contracted suppliers as one of three primary delivery types alongside city and rural carriers. The plan does not invent a new tool. It promotes a tool the institution already uses from exception to default.

The Exchange would offer four standard products. Basic Mail would be the cheapest tier, with four deliveries per month and no urgent promise. Certified Basic Mail would offer the same schedule but with proof of mailing and delivery. Government and Legal Mail, paid by agencies, courts, campaigns, and states, would carry a higher service level. Remote Area Mail would be either explicitly priced higher or transparently subsidized through a universal-service fund. The point is to make every subsidy visible. Today, the cost of delivering mail to a remote ranch in Montana is silently socialized across every first class envelope in America. That hidden cross-subsidy is one of the principal reasons honest postal accounting is impossible. The Federal Mail Exchange would put rural subsidies on the budget line where they belong, where Congress can defend them or amend them.

The most overlooked piece of the reform is what to do with the parcel business. USPS pulled $32.6 billion in parcel revenue in fiscal year 2025, and it competes directly with UPS, FedEx, Amazon, DHL, and a growing fleet of regional couriers. There is no public reason the federal government should be running a parcel company, especially a money-losing one. Selling or subcontracting the parcel operation would produce real proceeds, which can be applied directly to retiring the $15 billion Treasury debt. The clean model is unambiguous. Private carriers deliver packages. The Federal Mail Exchange administers universal basic mail. The federal role is to guarantee, not to compete.

A reform of this scale demands serious contractor standards. Every certified carrier should face background checks for drivers, chain of custody scans from tender to delivery, geofenced delivery confirmation, tamper-evident route bags, mandatory insurance and performance bonds, strict misdelivery penalties, federal criminal penalties for theft or destruction of mail, prohibition on resale of address or mail-flow data, and unannounced inspection authority for the Exchange. The mailbox rule, which presently protects the box from unpaid mailable matter, should remain, but access should be extended to certified contractors carrying postage-paid mail under the same legal protections as today’s letter carriers. Without that legal cover, the Private Express Statutes would smother the model in the cradle.

There is a second virtue here, and it deserves to be stated plainly. The current Postal Service is among the most heavily unionized institutions in the federal government, with over 92% of its workforce belonging to a union. Federal Election Commission data shows that roughly 90% of postal worker political contributions flow to Democrat candidates. The National Association of Letter Carriers and the American Postal Workers Union endorsed Kamala Harris for President in 2024, and their leadership openly told members that the Republican nominee threatened their livelihoods and the country itself. This is not an abstract problem. The Postal Service handles a vast share of mail-in ballots, roughly 65 million in 2024, accounting for nearly 46% of the national vote. In Oregon, Washington, Colorado, Utah, and Hawaii, more than 90% of ballots are delivered and returned through USPS. A late September 2024 directive routed many mail-in ballots around the standard Mail Isolation Control and Tracking imaging process, sidelining the very audit trail that allowed cross-verification between ballots sent and ballots counted. Documented cases of postal workers discarding ballots, from Nicholas Beauchene in New Jersey to Thomas Cooper in West Virginia to Michael Delacruz in Pennsylvania, are not hypothetical. They are matters of public record. A system in which 64.9 million Informed Delivery users could once verify their ballots’ scanned image, and now cannot, is a system in which transparency has been quietly traded for trust. Trust, however, is not a substitute for verification.

The Federal Mail Exchange addresses this risk directly. Distributing delivery across many certified private carriers, subject to chain of custody scans, geofenced confirmation, and federal inspection, breaks up the single largest concentration of partisan workforce in the country and replaces it with a competitive, auditable, contractually disciplined network. The federal government keeps the standards. The unions lose their effective monopoly on the physical handling of the nation’s ballots and mail. That is not a side benefit. It is one of the central reasons a conservative should welcome the model.

The political virtue of the plan is that it forces honesty. Congress has long demanded a high-service postal system, resisted closures, protected rural access, expected uniform prices, and then expressed shock at the resulting losses. GAO’s core recommendation is that Congress decide what level of postal service the nation actually needs and how self-sustaining USPS should be. The Federal Mail Exchange answers that question without evasion. The nation needs a guaranteed basic mail floor, four drops per month at every address, not a government-run daily delivery empire. It needs transparent rural subsidies, not silent cross-subsidies. It needs competitive delivery, not a uniformed monopoly. It needs auditable elections, not opaque chains of custody. Smaller, more honest, much closer to profitable, and far less politicized. That is what reform actually looks like.

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