That's exactly the problem with Hillary-no surprises and therefore a continuation of the status quo which we can all see isn't working out very well. While I don't necessarily agree with SD that government always creates problems, it has in fact created a lot of problems which otherwise wouldn't exist. Besides the ones SD mentioned:
1) The so-called drug wars which haven't reduced drug use but have sapped a huge amount of resources. It also produced drug lords with more resources and weapons than a lot of countries. I still recall back in the 1990s when drug dealers were evicting people from their apartments in housing projects, turning them into drug labs, and public executing any local residents who tried to stop them. The police were powerless to do anything about it. My idea is to just legalize all this, sell it through legitimate channels, tax it, and use some of the taxes to treat drug abusers and have ads against drug use. It may still not stop the problem, but at least you won't be giving two bit thugs a huge income stream.
2) The public education crisis. Thanks to the power of teacher's unions, we reward failure rather than success.
Gifted students have their programs chopped while we throw money at failing schools, advocate for smaller class sizes, and so forth. It's mostly an employment mill for public education teachers. We're aiming for equality of achievement but that's a fallacy.
Not all students are created equal but it's taboo to say that. It's even taboo to talk about student IQ these days.
Let's acknowledge once and for all that in many cases the students themselves are the cause of bad schools. Instead of aiming to have similar results on standardized tests which themselves aren't a good measure of learning, let's just aim to teach students as well as they can be taught. Some people aren't cut out for college or academia. They might be better off being taught a trade.
3) The health care crisis. Obamacare did nothing to get rid of the tons of unnecessary paperwork dealing with a crazy quilt of thousands of insurers. Every other civilized country has a one payer system. We should have gone that way. Health care is one area were the government can do better than private industry. The administrative costs for Medicare are much lower than that of insurance companies, and by definition there is no need for a "profit".
4) The infrastructure crisis. The 60 year policy of incentizing private car use over alternatives has been a disaster of epic proportions. We take longer to get where we're going, spend more doing it, and have more people die in preventable transportation related incidents. We've built more roads than we can afford to maintain and yet we're still expanding our highways. We should have a sane policy which matches the mode to the area. Cars for rural areas, rail transit, bikes, buses, and walking for urban and inner ring suburbs. High-speed rail for intercity and interstate transport instead of planes. Freight rail for long distance cargo instead of 18-wheelers. Denser settlement patterns unless the people living there can really afford the true cost of ultra low density. Outer ring suburbs largely shouldn't exist, indeed wouldn't exist without government bankrolling them. Let them return to nature, or let the rich take them over since they're the only ones who can really afford the true cost of that type of living.
5) The debt crisis. On all levels, we've borrowed from the future to finance the needs of today. We should have either cut programs or had higher taxes. We shouldn't have let college costs balloon out of control, largely thanks to readily available student loans. Eliminate student loans, and wipe out existing student loan debt. This is an area where the government meant well, but it backfired. Too many people going to college have diluted the value of a college degree. Have only people in college who will really benefit from it, and fund their educations 100% like we do up through high school.
6) The income tax. There are better ways to collect revenue than a system which requires armies of accountants who arguably contribute no real value to society. They're necessary only because tax laws make them necessary. Have a consumption tax and fees on commodities instead. These monies could be remitted directly to government as they're collected, with no need for anyone to file tax returns.
Those are just off the top of my head. All were problems created by government. Some can be solved by getting government out of the picture entirely. Others need to have government intervene in a smarter manner.