Democrats confront limits of their power in bid to stop Trump and Musk
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[February 05, 2025]
By STEVE PEOPLES and NICHOLAS RICCARDI
WASHINGTON (AP) — Outraged Democrats are testing the limits of their
diminished power as they try to stop the stunning power grabs of
President Donald Trump and his chief lieutenant, Elon Musk.
The tech billionaire's maneuvers, which include the hostile seizure of
taxpayer data and the apparent closure of the government’s leading
international humanitarian aid agency, have riled many Democrats, who
have been mired in a post-election funk and struggled to identify a
cohesive strategy in the earliest days of Trump’s presidency.
Democratic members of Congress threatened to try to bring Trump's
agenda, including his Cabinet nominations, to a grinding halt.
Operatives assembled a new war room in their party headquarters. And
Democratic protesters, backed by a sudden influx of elected officials,
warned of a looming constitutional crisis at ballooning rallies across
the nation's capital.
“With one voice, we can push back and resist the excesses and extremes
of the Trump administration," newly elected Democratic National
Committee Chair Ken Martin said in an interview. “Only two weeks in,
Elon Musk is already our worst president ever.”
It’s unclear, however, if such attempts at obstruction would
realistically stop Trump and Musk.
Republicans control the White House and both chambers of Congress, while
the Supreme Court is led by a 6-3 conservative majority. And Republicans
who control Congress, so far at least, have cheered Trump and Musk’s
provocative moves.
Vice President JD Vance on Tuesday shared one of the billionaire’s
social media posts in which he claimed to have discovered roughly $700
billion in government fraud.
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“When Elon and the team started I was very supportive but thought the
waste and fraud would top out at $250 billion,” Vance wrote. “The real
number will end up much higher.”
Musk, the world's wealthiest person, oversees a team of people at the
Department of Government Efficiency in Washington. With Trump’s
blessing, the billionaire CEO is moving to fire or sideline career
government officials, gain access to sensitive databases and dismantle
agencies he disfavors.
On Monday, some of Musk’s agents were spotted at the Department of
Education, which Trump has vowed to abolish. And on Tuesday, Musk called
for National Public Radio to be stripped of federal funding.
None of it is happening with congressional approval, inviting a
constitutional clash over the limits of presidential authority.
Democratic activists want their elected officials to do more.
More than 1,000 protesters gathered outside the Department of Treasury
building in downtown Washington on Tuesday evening. Their chants of
“Elon Musk has got to go!” echoed off the building's marble columns as
more than two dozen House and Senate Democrats lined up to speak.
It was the same building where Musk’s team last week gained access to
the U.S. Treasury payment system. The system is responsible for 1
billion payments per year totaling $5 trillion and includes sensitive
information involving bank accounts and Social Security payments.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer tried to lead a chant of, “We
will win.” He was quickly drowned out by chants of, “Shut down the
Senate!”
Another protest speaker, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, said in an
interview that no elected Democrat should help Republicans govern in the
GOP-controlled House, even if that leads to a government shutdown.
“I don’t know that there’s anything in modern day history that comes
close to the moment we’re in,” Crockett said. “As we typically say in
the Black community, the hoods are off.”
In the Senate, some Democrats said they would break personal tradition
and oppose all of Trump’s remaining Cabinet nominees.
“I plan to oppose every cabinet level nominee that is considered on the
Senate floor going forward,” said Sen. Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del. “The
administration has carried out unlawful budget freezes, massive civil
servant layoffs and unconstitutional firings, directed federal funding
specifically to places with ‘higher birthrates,’ allowed an unelected
and unchecked billionaire to determine what our tax dollars are worthy
of funding, and more.”
“This is unacceptable and dangerous,” Blunt Rochester added.
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Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., center, is joined from
left by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.,
Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii and Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., ranking
member of the Senate Finance Committee, as they speak about the
Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, during a news
conference at the Capitol in Washington, Monday, Feb. 3, 2025. (AP
Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
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The growing outcry from Democrats extends well beyond Washington,
where some rank-and-file Democrats are upset that their
representatives in Congress are not doing enough.
Ezra Levin, who leads the Democratic activist group Indivisible,
said that 50,000 people joined a call on Sunday to pressure senators
to take a tougher stand against Musk. He was pleased that Democrats
in Washington seem to have rallied since last week’s unilateral
grant freeze, but he contends that the party can take more steps,
especially in the Senate.
“We don’t even have them issuing ongoing opposition to Trump’s
nominees while a coup is happening,” Levin said on Tuesday, noting
22 Senate Democrats voted to confirm Trump’s nominee for secretary
of veterans affairs, Doug Collins. “This isn’t about any individual
program, this is about whether we have a constitution.”
Democrats have few options.
Philip Joyce, a public policy professor at the University of
Maryland, noted that the Trump administration has been more than
willing to work around Congress during its latest round of executive
actions.
“Since the administration doesn’t seem concerned with doing things
that have been viewed as illegal or unconstitutional in the past, I
can’t see any other option other than taking the administration to
court,” Joyce said.
Indeed, Democrats at this point hope the courts will provide the
checks and balances that Trump's Republican allies in Washington
will not.
Democratic state attorneys general and nonprofit groups successfully
filed lawsuits last week that led to separate court orders halting
Trump-ordered funding freezes that triggered panic among nonprofit
organizations, including hospitals and social welfare groups. On
Monday, federal worker unions sued to block Musk and his staff from
accessing the Treasury payments system. Multiple groups have also
sued to prevent Trump from stripping civil service protections from
a swathe of federal workers.
At the same time, Democrats and their allies are increasingly
concerned that Trump may ignore court orders altogether. Already,
the term-limited president is bypassing laws that establish federal
funding levels and worker protections.
Everett Kelley, president of the American Federation of Government
Employees, told the AP that his union is already preparing for Trump
to ignore a court order.
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“We won’t give up. We’ll keep fighting until justice prevails," he
said.
In one apparent silver lining, Kelly noted that Trump has been good
for union participation in recent weeks. The American Federation of
Government Employees expanded its ranks by 8,693 members in January
and another 3,000 people have joined so far in January, he said.
Government workers were among the hundreds who protested outside
federal offices on Tuesday.
Protesters outside the Office of Personnel targeted Musk almost more
than Trump.
“Elon, Elon, stop the coup! Nobody elected you!” they chanted
earlier in the day, as some waved signs that read, “Musk must go.
Get out! Now.”
“It’s one thing to downsize the government. It’s one thing to try to
obliterate it," said Dan Smith, a Maryland resident whose father was
a farmer, a USDA research scientist, and “one of the hardest working
federal employees I knew.”
He called the Trump administration's moves “frightening and
disgusting.”
“My only hope is that they’re going to push too far, and there’s
going to be a response and a retaliation — and we’re going to come
out this thing with more and stronger belief in democracy," Smith
said.
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Peoples reported from New York. AP writer Chris Megerian
contributed.
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