DOGE's access to Treasury data risks US financial standing and raises
security worries, experts warn
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[February 11, 2025]
By FATIMA HUSSEIN and DAVID KLEPPER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Government Efficiency’s embed into
the federal government has raised a host of concerns, transforming a
debate over how to cut government waste into a confrontation over
privacy rights and the nation’s financial standing in the world.
DOGE, spearheaded by billionaire Donald Trump donor Elon Musk, has
rapidly burrowed deep into federal agencies and taken drastic actions to
cut spending. This includes trying to get rid of thousands of federal
workers, shuttering the U.S. Agency for International Development and
accessing the Treasury Department's enormous payment systems.
Advocacy groups and labor unions have filed lawsuits in an attempt to
save agencies and federal worker jobs, and five former treasury
secretaries are sounding the alarm on the risks associated with Musk’s
DOGE accessing sensitive Treasury Department payment systems and
potentially stopping congressionally authorized payments.
“Any hint of the selective suspension of congressionally authorized
payments will be a breach of trust and ultimately, a form of default.
And our credibility, once lost, will prove difficult to regain,” said
former treasury secretaries Robert Rubin, Larry Summers, Timothy
Geithner, Jacob Lew and Janet Yellen in an op-ed in The New York Times
on Monday.
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They warn about the risks of “arbitrary and capricious political control
of federal payments, which would be unlawful and corrosive to our
democracy.”
Musk said on his social media platform X on Monday that “we need to stop
government spending like a drunken sailor on fraud & waste or America is
gonna go bankrupt. That does mean a lot of grifters will lose their
grift and complain loudly about it. Too bad. Deal with it.”
Experts in the financial and digital privacy worlds warn that the U.S.
financial system is delicate and complicated and could be harmed by
unilateral moves. They also say that Americans' personal information
could be compromised by the unsafe handling of sensitive data.
Andrew Metrick, director of the Yale Program on Financial Stability,
says DOGE’s actions as a “go fast and break things group” pose a danger
to the U.S. financial system and the U.S. dollar’s standing as the
world’s reserve currency.
On the issue of cutting government programs or potentially undermining
U.S. democratic norms, DOGE is “not going to care, but they should care
about harming the dollar and harming the safety of U.S. government
debt,” Metrick said.
Crossing the Rubicon of danger would be something perceived as a default
event on bonds, Metrick said, especially as the U.S. runs very close to
its statutory debt limit.
“We maintain a complicated financial system — a few wrong actions and
the world loses confidence in our ability to manage that system."
On cybersecurity issues, the public has no idea what safeguards or
policies, if any, Musk and his staffers used to protect the sensitive
data they accessed, according to John Davisson, senior counsel at the
Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington-based nonprofit that
advocates for digital privacy. Davisson called DOGE’s access “the
largest data breach and most consequential data breach in U.S. history.”
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Elon Musk speaks at an indoor Presidential Inauguration parade event
in Washington, Jan. 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
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The Treasury Department’s databases include information about
individual and business taxes, medical records, Social Security
payments and numbers, and government payments, as well as a long
list of other personal data, such as birthdates, home addresses and
phone numbers, military records and disability information, Davisson
said.
Typically, government employees who handle the data are subject to
training requirements and myriad rules to ensure the data isn't
mishandled, leaked or breached. Often, data is kept segregated in
different systems to ensure no one person has easy access to all the
information. What may look like inefficiency, Davisson said, is
actually a means of securing sensitive data.
It was an “imperfect but quite robust” system, Davisson said, and
without it, Americans could be at greater risk of identity theft,
stalking or other crimes. Personal information could be sold to
online data brokers, who could use the data to gain an even more
accurate portrait of Americans and their habits.
Davisson said he doesn’t accept arguments from Musk and Trump that
the data access is about finding efficiencies in government.
“This is about control. There are ways to improve efficiency in
government. ... They involve legislation, they involve regulation,
they involve trained personnel and experts,” he said. “This is about
establishing control over databases and thereby establishing control
over federal agencies.”
In one of several disputes over DOGE's access to the Treasury
Department, labor unions and advocacy groups have sued to block the
payments system review from proceeding because of concerns about its
legality. U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly on Thursday
restricted DOGE’s read-only access of Treasury’s payment systems to
two workers, one of them Tom Krause, who now appears on the Treasury
Department website as performing the functions of fiscal assistant
secretary.
Saturday’s court ruling in favor of 19 Democratic attorneys general
who sued to block DOGE from accessing sensitive Treasury Department
records shows Americans aren’t powerless to stop Musk, said Lisa
Gilbert, co-president of Public Citizen, one of the groups that has
sued the government over DOGE’s access. She said her group and other
advocacy organizations will work to ensure the new administration
follows the law — and that court orders are followed.
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“This is really clear law. Our federal records have personal
information in them. They’re protected,” she said. “They are moving
fast and doing things that normal governments wouldn’t try, and the
courts are responding appropriately.”
Trump told Fox News on Sunday that Musk is “not gaining anything"
from his role in DOGE. ”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.
Metrick said: "I am nervous they have a hammer and the whole
government looks like a nail to them, but Treasury is a thumb.”
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