As DOGE hammers away at the US government, Republicans stir with quiet
objections
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[February 13, 2025]
By LISA MASCARO and KEVIN FREKING
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Sen. Katie Britt has been working to make
sure the Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency
doesn't hit what she called “life-saving, groundbreaking research at
high-achieving institutions,” including her state's beloved University
of Alabama.
Kansas GOP Sen. Jerry Moran is worried that food from heartland farmers
would spoil rather than be sent around the world as the U.S. Agency for
International Development shutters.
And Idaho GOP Rep. Mike Simpson warns national parks could be impaired
by cutbacks at the start of summer hiring in preparation for the
onslaught of visitors.
“We need to have a conversation with DOGE and the administration about
exactly what they’ve done here,” said Simpson, a seasoned lawmaker who
sits on the powerful Appropriations Committee. “It’s a concern to all of
us.”
One by one, in public statements and private conversations, Republican
lawmakers are beginning to speak up to protect home-state interests,
industries and jobs that are endangered by President Donald Trump's
executive actions and the slash-and-burn tactics erupting across the
federal government by billionaire Elon Musk 's DOGE.
While Democrats have been denouncing the impact of Trump's cuts on
Americans, the stirrings from Republicans are less a collective action
than targeted complaints. Almost none are openly questioning the purpose
or legality of the DOGE effort, which the party has largely cheered. But
taken together, the quiet concerns are the first glimmers of GOP
pushback against Trump's upending of the federal government.
“The people voted for major government reform, and that’s what the
people are going to get,” Musk said Tuesday in the Oval Office with
Trump.
The situation unfolding on a scale like nothing Washington has ever seen
as Trump issues executive actions at a rapid clip and Musk's team roams
agency to agency, tapping into computer systems, digging into budgets
and searching for what he calls waste, fraud and abuse. Dozens of
lawsuits are piling up claiming Trump and DOGE are violating the law.
While presidents have long taken liberty with their authority to issue
executive orders, actions and proclamations toward their goals, the
White House typically chooses a few signature priorities to make a mark
rather than employ such vast power to sweep across the government.
Former President Barack Obama, for example, used executive authority to
protect from deportation an entire group of immigrants — the young “
Dreamers ” who came to the U.S. as children without proper paperwork.
Former President Joe Biden used his executive authority to cancel
student loan debt for millions. Both actions have been in court and are
still making their way through the legal system.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said DOGE is taking a “meat ax” to
the federal government.
“If you want to make cuts, then you do it through a debate in Congress,”
said the New York senator, “not lawlessly.”
It raises questions about what happens next as judges are quickly
slapping on limits and halting many of the White House actions. Both
Musk and Vice President JD Vance have questioned the legitimacy of
judicial oversight, which is a mainstay of the U.S. democracy and its
balance of power.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said he met with Musk at the start of the
week and has no concern that DOGE is going too far or treading on
Congress' authority to direct taxpayer dollars or provide oversight of
the executive branch.
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Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill, Jan.
14, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)
“To me, it’s very exciting what they’re able to do because what Elon
and the DOGE is doing right now is what Congress has been unable to
do in recent years,” the Louisiana Republican said, referring to the
spending reviews underway.
Johnson said he agrees with Vance and suggested the courts should
cool it.
“The courts should take a step back and allow these processes to
play out,” he said. “What we're doing is good and right for the
American people.”
Alabama's Britt was far from alone in speaking up about Trump's caps
on the National Institutes of Health grant program that hit
universities, medical centers and research institutions coast to
coast.
“While the administration works to achieve this goal at NIH, a
smart, targeted approach is needed,” the senator said in a
statement.
North Carolina GOP Sen. Ted Budd said he has heard from constituents
in his state, home to the Raleigh area's influential Research
Triangle. And Sen. Susan Collins, the chair of the Senate
Appropriations Committee, listed the ways scientists in Maine are
conducting “much-needed research on Lyme disease and other
tick-borne illnesses, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, Duchenne’s Muscular
Dystrophy,” as well as other research as she decried the funding
caps.
“There is no investment that pays greater dividends to American
families than our investment in biomedical research,” Collins said
in a statement.
As the U.S. Agency for International Development was being
dismantled, Kansas' Moran said on social media that “U.S. food aid
feeds the hungry, bolsters our national security & provides an
important market for our farmers, especially when commodity prices
are low."
The senator said he spoke to the Department of Agriculture and "the
White House about the importance of resuming the procurement,
shipping & distribution of American-grown food.”
Moran and others have been working on legislation that would move
management of food aid program from USAID to USDA.
On Saturday, Moran shared an update: “GOOD NEWS: State Dept. has
approved shipping to resume, allowing NGOs to distribute the $560
million of American-grown food aid sitting in US & global ports to
those in need.”
He thanked Secretary of State Marco Rubio “for helping make certain
this life-saving aid gets to those in need before it spoils.”
It's unclear, however, if the aid work will have the funding to
resume. And the gutting of global supply lines for aid shipments,
thanks to the shuttering of USAID, also makes it uncertain that
enough workers can be found to deliver stalled food aid, aid groups
say.
In Florida, GOP Rep. Carlos Gimenez is trying to help Venezuelans,
who fled their homeland and are now living in the Miami area under
Temporary Protected Status, from being deported as Trump ends the
program.
Gimenez wrote last month to ask the administration to consider
Venezuelans on a case-by-case basis.
“I support the president in the vast majority of things he does,"
Gimenez told the Associated Press.
“As a member of Congress, I also have to represent the interests of
my constituents,” he said.
Asked if he felt he had the power to make a difference, he replied:
“I'm not powerless. I’m a member of Congress."
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