Elon Musk dodges DOGE scrutiny while expanding his power in Washington
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[February 10, 2025]
By CHRIS MEGERIAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — Elon Musk made a clear promise after Donald Trump
decided to put him in charge of making the government more efficient.
“It’s not going to be some sort of backroom secret thing,” Musk said
last year. “It will be as transparent as possible," maybe even streamed
live online.
It hasn't worked out that way so far.
In the three weeks since the Republican president has been back in the
White House, Musk has rapidly burrowed deep into federal agencies while
avoiding public scrutiny of his work. He has not answered questions from
journalists or attended any hearings with lawmakers. Staff members for
his so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, have
sidelined career officials around Washington.
It is a profound challenge not only to business-as-usual within the
federal government, which Trump campaigned on disrupting, but to
concepts of consensus and transparency that are foundational in a
democratic system. Musk describes himself as “White House tech support,”
and he has embedded himself in an unorthodox administration where there
are no discernible limits on his influence.
Donald K. Sherman, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and
Ethics in Washington, said Trump has allowed Musk to “exert
unprecedented power and authority over government systems” with “maximal
secrecy and little-to-no accountability.”
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The White House insisted that DOGE is “extremely transparent" and shared
examples of its work so far, such as canceling contracts and ending
leases for underused buildings. House Republicans said the Trump
administration also discovered that Social Security benefits were being
paid to a dozen people listed as 150 years old.
“We’re going to find billions, hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud
and abuse and, you know, the people elected me on that,” Trump said in a
Fox News interview to be aired along with the Super Bowl on Sunday. He
described Musk as “terrific" and said he would soon focus on the
Department of Defense, the country's largest government agency.
Asked on Friday if Musk should publicly answer questions about his work,
the president said, “Oh sure.”
“He’s not shy,” Trump said. "Elon’s not shy.”
That is true, at least judging by Musk's social media, where no thought
appears to be suppressed. His X account is a flood of internet memes,
attacks on critics and professions of loyalty to the president. He has
made clear the grand scope of his ambitions, talking in existential
terms about the need to reverse the federal deficit, cut government
spending and roll back progressive programs.
"This administration has one chance for major reform that may never come
again," he posted on Saturday. “It’s now or never.”
Musk is used to doing things his own way. The world's richest person, he
became wealthy with the online payment service PayPal, then took over
the electric car manufacturer Tesla and founded the rocket company
SpaceX. More recently, he bought Twitter and rebranded it as X, cutting
jobs and remaking its culture.
He seems to be taking a similar approach to the federal government, but
he can be tightlipped about his plans. For example, he has not explained
how his team will utilize access to payment systems that include
sensitive data on people in the United States.
Much of DOGE's work is happening behind the scenes. Team members have
shown up at the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Treasury Department,
the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, among other agencies. Their arrival is never
publicly announced, and career staff members are looking over their
shoulders for unfamiliar faces in the hallways.
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At the Education Department, DOGE employees are working out of a
conference room on the seventh floor, which also houses the secretary's
office.
Sheria Smith, president of a federal employees union that represents
some of the agency’s staff, said it is unclear what internal systems
have been accessed by Musk's team and for what reason.
“It’s the lack of transparency that’s alarming,” she said.
While longtime staff members fret about their future, DOGE workers have
been spotted cheerfully trading high-fives with each other.
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People protest during a rally against Elon Musk outside the U.S.
Department of Labor in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025. (AP
Photo/Jose Luis Magana)
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"They don’t seem to answer to anyone and are not engaging with
anyone in our agency,” Smith said.
Sometimes a rumor circulates that Musk himself is making the rounds.
But he generally has been at the White House complex, where he has
an office.
David Sacks, a Musk ally working on artificial intelligence and
cryptocurrency issues for the administration, said he stopped by to
check on the DOGE team.
“The whole room was full of young coders,” he said during The All-In
Podcast, which Sacks hosts with three other venture capitalists.
“The facilities people don’t know what to do because they’ve never
had people ask to stay late on Friday night before.”
Journalists have been piecing together the identities of people who
work for DOGE, discovering a cadre of young acolytes with technology
and engineering backgrounds.
Some were previously employed by Musk’s companies, and Musk has said
it is a crime to reveal their names. He has not cited any law that
would be broken by such a disclosure.
It does not appear to be an idle threat. Ed Martin, the
Trump-appointed interim U.S. attorney in the nation's capital, said
last week that “we will pursue any and all legal action against
anyone who impedes your work or threatens your people.”
Martin followed up on Friday to thank Musk for referring suspects
who were “stealing government property and/or threatening government
employees.” No additional information was provided by Martin's
office or the White House.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright defended DOGE’s work, saying in a CNBC
interview Friday that members of Musk’s team were like “young gun
management consultants coming in to take a critical look at how
things are run.”
“They’re part of a team assembled by DOGE, friends in Elon’s broader
circle that are very good at IT and very good at systems," Wright
said.
It took more than two weeks after Trump's inauguration on Jan. 20 to
figure out that Musk had formally joined the administration as a
special government employee. The White House said Musk will file a
financial disclosure report, but it will be kept secret. Because of
Musk's sprawling business interests, the report would likely be
among the most extensive ever compiled.
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It’s unclear whether Musk swore an oath to the Constitution like
other federal workers. Even though Trump promised that Musk would
steer clear of any areas where he has a conflict of interest, no
details have been provided on how that is being evaluated. A test of
that arrangement could come soon, with Musk set to review spending
at the Pentagon, where SpaceX has billions of dollars in contracts
to put satellites in orbit.
Democrats on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
tried to issue a subpoena to force Musk to testify, but the effort
was blocked by Republicans.
“Who is this unelected billionaire, that he can attempt to dismantle
federal agencies, fire people, transfer them, offer them early
retirement, and have sweeping reform or changes to agencies without
any congressional review, oversight, or concurrence?” said Rep.
Gerald Connolly of Virginia, the committee's top Democrat.
House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said Republicans
were “doing the bidding of an unelected, out of control, billionaire
puppet master.”
Trump said he was still in charge of Musk, saying “I’ll tell him to
go here, go there, he does it.”
He also backed Musk's aggressive approach.
“We have to take some of these things apart to find the corruption,"
he said.
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Associated Press writers Collin Binkley and Fatima Hussein
contributed to this report.
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