Gov. Tim Walz launching town hall tour in Republican House districts

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Gov. Tim Walz launching town hall tour in Republican House districts

Tommy Wiita – March 13, 2025

Gov. Tim Walz is planning stops at House districts around the United States represented by Republicans who have stopped holding town halls due to ongoing backlash to federal cuts by President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk.

Walz announced the tour of red states on Wednesday, with the move a significant indicator that he intends to run for president in 2028, after his time as Kamala Harris’ running mate in 2024.

Walz is planning stops beginning on Friday in Iowa’s 3rd District, which is represented by Rep. Zach Nunn, and will then head to Nebraska’s 2nd District, home to Rep. Don Bacon, according to national media reports. His office also has stops planned in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Ohio as well.

“I’m going to go out there and make sure those folks down in Iowa know that their [Rep. Nunn] doesn’t want to come talk to them but he voted for this stuff,” Walz said during an appearance on MSNBC. “He voted to defund these things, he voted to make it impossible to talk to the VA and cut 70,000 people to care for our veterans. By the way, many of those 70,000 are veterans themselves.”

“So I think again this is us going out and talking to people, making the case that people are absolutely clear that both parties are not the same: one stands with Elon Musk, the billionaires and the dismantling of America as we know it, and one that’s going to be there for their families. And if we’re not out there, Donald Trump, all the podcasts, all the money will fill that void … I hope people show up at that town hall and say, ‘look governor, what are you offering? Are you offering anything better?’ That’s fair. But to turn your back and not do it, it’s dangerous.”

But Walz’s announcement has drawn criticism from Republicans in Minnesota, with state Rep. Zach Duckworth accusing him of abandoning Minnesota at a time it is facing a $6 billion budget deficit by 2029.

“All great selfless leaders leave their job during its most critical moments – like solving a $6 Billion deficit they created,” he said. “Abandoning Minnesota mid session when the real work is about to begin is publicly admitting you’re not needed and have no interest in actually governing.”

Walz aims to fill void after Republican advice on town halls

It’s been reported that Republicans representatives have been advised by NRCC chairperson Rep. Richard Hudson to not hold town halls going forward due to backlash over the Trump administration’s policies.

It follows a series of high-profile confrontations at Republican town halls held across the U.S., which saw representatives assailed by local residents angry by the scale and severity of the cuts and layoffs being imposed by the administration and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by Musk.

Walz reacted to the NRCC’s order on Twitter, suggesting that he would host an event in a district a Republican currently holds to gain more support for Democrats.

“That’s a shame. If your Republican representative won’t meet with you because their agenda is so unpopular, maybe a Democrat will,” Walz said. “Hell, maybe I will. If your congressman refuses to meet, I’ll come host an event in their district to help local Democrats beat ‘em.”

Related: Gov. Walz offers to step in and hold town halls if Republicans won’t

Walz later told CNN he had been overwhelmed by the response to that tweet, saying his staff has been sifting through “hundreds of invitations from local party leaders and candidates asking him to come.”

Outside of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has been holding events in Republican districts for the past several weeks, no other major Democratic leaders have done the same.

Minnesota currently has four congressional districts controlled by Republicans: Rep. Brad Finstad in the 1st Congressional District; Rep. Tom Emmer in the 6th Congressional District; Rep. Michelle Fischbach in the 7th Congressional District; and Rep. Pete Stauber in the 8th Congressional District. It’s unclear if Walz intends to visit any, some or all of these districts during his tour.

The Minnesota governor told CNN he intends to tell voters that it “doesn’t have to be this way,” referencing this week’s move by the administration to slash the U.S. Department of Education in half.

Related: Walz slams Department of Education cuts, says it will undermine schools and children

On Wednesday, Walz called out the Trump administration’s firing of nearly half the Department of Education, saying it will have a “detrimental impact on children.”

“This is undermining our economic wellbeing for the future, it’s undermining our competitive advantage, and it’s undermining the moral authority that every child truly matters. So what Donald Trump continues to do is the idiocy of whatever he thinks at the time is a good talking point,” Walz said during a Democratic Governors call held on Wednesday.

Gov. Tim Walz speaks in Bloomington, Minn. on Aug. 1, 2024. Photo courtesy of Office of Governor Tim Walz via Flickr.
Gov. Tim Walz speaks in Bloomington, Minn. on Aug. 1, 2024. Photo courtesy of Office of Governor Tim Walz via Flickr.

Kremlin told U.S. it didn’t want Trump’s Ukraine-Russia envoy at peace talks

NBC News

Kremlin told U.S. it didn’t want Trump’s Ukraine-Russia envoy at peace talks

Keir Simmons – March 13, 2025

President Donald Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia was excluded from high-level talks on ending the war after the Kremlin said it didn’t want him there, a U.S. administration official and a Russian official told NBC News.

Retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg was conspicuously absent from two recent summits in Saudi Arabia — one with Russian officials and the other with Ukrainians — even though the talks come under his remit.

“Together,” Trump said in announcing Kellogg’s nomination in November, “we will secure PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH.”

But Kellogg did not attend U.S.-Russia talks in Riyadh, the Saudi capital, on Feb. 18. Russian President Vladimir Putin thought he was too pro-Ukraine, a senior Russian official with direct knowledge of the Kremlin’s thinking told NBC News.

“Kellogg is a former American general, too close to Ukraine. Not our kind of person, not of the caliber we are looking for,” according to the official, who is not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

A U.S. official in the Trump administration, who is also not authorized to speak publicly, confirmed that Russia did not want Kellogg involved. The official did not know when that was communicated to the White House.

Where this leaves Kellogg is unclear.

Kellogg’s office did not respond to requests for comment on why he has not been involved in the negotiations and whether Russia had requested that he not attend.

National Security Council spokesman James Hewitt said Trump had “utilized the talents of multiple senior administration officials to assist in the bringing the war in Ukraine to a peaceful resolution.” He added that Kellogg remained “a valued part of the team, especially as it relates to talks with our European allies.”

Ending the war

Kellogg, 80, is a staunch Trump loyalist who served in various roles in Trump’s first term, including a stint as Vice President Mike Pence’s national security adviser.

Before he was confirmed as Trump’s envoy for Russia-Ukraine peace in January, he wrote about what he called the Biden administration’s “incompetent” foreign policies.

Image: TOPSHOT-UKRAINE-US-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-WAR (Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Keith Kellogg in Kyiv last month.

In a paper for the America First Policy Institute, which was founded to promote Trump’s policies, he suggested that to end the war the United States should arm Ukraine and strengthen its defenses, thus ensuring that “Russia will make no further advances and will not attack again after a cease-fire or peace agreement.”

“Future American military aid, however, will require Ukraine to participate in peace talks with Russia,” Kellogg and his co-author, Fred Fleit, wrote.

During his presidential campaign, Trump said that it was a top priority to end the war, which started in February 2022 when Russia launched a full-scale invasion of its smaller neighbor, and that he would halt hostilities “24 hours” after taking office.

The war has raged on after Trump became president for a second time, with Russia making slow progress on the battlefield in Ukraine and pressing Ukrainian forces that had taken a sliver of Russian territory across the border in Kursk.

Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery toward Russian positions in the Donetsk region last year. (Evgeniy Maloletka / AP)
Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery toward Russian positions in the Donetsk region last year.

On Feb. 11, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, went to Moscow and spent 3½ hours with Putin.

There is no official account of their meeting. Witkoff had traveled to Russia to help secure the release of Marc Fogel, an American teacher held for 3½ years for a minor medical cannabis infraction.

In a CBS News interview, Witkoff, a New York real estate developer and a friend of Trump’s, called his hourslong meeting with Putin a “trust building” assignment from Trump. He said that he was the only U.S. official present at the meeting and that he carried a message for Putin from Trump. Witkoff also said Putin “had something for me to transmit back to the president” but did not say what it was.

The following day, Trump wrote on Truth Social that he had spoken with Putin and that they had “agreed to have our respective teams start negotiations immediately.”

“We agreed to work together, very closely, including visiting each other’s Nations,” he added.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov later said that during the 90-minute call, Putin “expressed readiness to receive American officials in Russia regarding areas of mutual interest, including, of course, the topic of Ukrainian settlement.”

On Feb. 13, Trump announced a list of diplomats who would attend the talks with Russia. Witkoff, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and national security adviser Michael Waltz were on the team led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio

Kellogg was not on the list. A second U.S. official told NBC News at the time that the decision stung him.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio during talks with Russian officials in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on Feb. 18, 2025. (Evelyn Hockstein / AFP - Getty Images)
U.S. and Russian officials meet at Riyadh’s Diriyah Palace on Feb. 18.

A representative for Witkoff would not comment when NBC News asked whether his boss discussed Kellogg’s exclusion with Putin.

Asked last week whether Russian officials had requested that Kellogg not be included in the high-level talks, Russian Foreign Affairs Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that it was up to American leaders to “fix their delegation” and that Russia’s diplomats had “great experience of dealing with different envoys.”

Andrei Fedorov, a former deputy foreign minister who maintains close ties with the Kremlin, went further, telling NBC News that Kellogg was “not the person with whom Russia will negotiate with” because his position on the talks was to freeze the front line in Ukraine.

Russia wants Kyiv’s forces to withdraw from Ukrainian regions where there is still fighting, including the southern Kherson and Zaporizhzhia administrative regions, known as oblasts, Fedorov, said.

Russia illegally annexed the regions, along with Donetsk and Luhansk, in September 2022.

Little was said about the war in Ukraine after Rubio and his team met with Russian officials in Riyadh on Feb. 18, although Rubio did announce that the countries had agreed to restore embassy staffing.

Trump has since played hardball with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, with relations reaching a low point after their extraordinary Oval Office spat on Feb. 28. The United States subsequently paused intelligence sharing and providing security assistance to Ukraine.

From left: National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and Secretary of State Marco Rubio meeting with Ukrainian officials Andriy Yermak, Andrii Sybiha and Rustem Umerovin Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on March 11, 2025. (AFP - Getty Images)
National security adviser Michael Waltz and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, left, met with Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday.

The pause was lifted Tuesday after a Ukrainian delegation agreed to a proposal for a 30-day interim ceasefire at a meeting in Saudi Arabia with Rubio and his team

Kellogg was not present.

On Thursday, Trump dispatched Witkoff to Russia again.

Shortly after he arrived, Putin said at a news conference that he agreed “with the proposals to stop the hostilities” but that there were issues that needed to be discussed. He added that he may need to “have a phone call with Trump.”

More in Politics
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The Hill: Putin says he’s open to ceasefire, but wants to eliminate ’causes of this crisis’

trump and musk, who both never served their countries really hate U.S. Veterans: Trump’s mass federal workforce cuts: What has happened so far

USA Today

Trump’s mass federal workforce cuts: What has happened so far

Sarah D. Wire, USA TODAY – March 12, 2025

President Donald Trump’s mass firings of permanent federal employees have already begun and are expected to accelerate over the next few weeks with tens of thousands more employees terminated. But the layoffs didn’t come out of nowhere.

This week, federal agencies face a deadline to provide Trump administration officials with plans for a reduction in force, a dramatic downsizing of the nation’s more than 2 million federal workers that will occur over the next few months. Along with layoffs, some agencies are expected to indefinitely extend their hiring freezes, eliminate currently vacant positions and consolidate offices as ways to reduce headcount.

Guided by billionaire Elon Musk and his Department Of Government Efficiency aidesTrump has spent his first eight weeks in office focused on dismantling the federal government, including shutting down and laying off the staff of the United States Agency for International Development and taking steps to do the same to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Trump has also begun dismantling the Department of Education with cuts to about half of its workforce.

More: How Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, has dominated Trump’s agenda

After a buyout offer was accepted by fewer federal employees than expected, tens of thousands of probationary federal workers were laid off. Probationary workers include employees in their first year or two on the job, people who have recently moved between federal agencies and people who were recently promoted.

The firings have affected all 50 states and include employees at agencies that Americans frequently interact with, including the National Park Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, Internal Revenue Service, National Institutes of Health and many others.

The White House has not responded to repeated requests from USA TODAY for a precise number of fired employees. Here’s a timeline of how Trump’s workforce firings have taken shape, starting with Inauguration Day.

Jan. 20: Trump signs executive order changing job classifications
U.S. President Donald Trump gestures while signing a series of executive actions in the Oval Office at the White House on Inauguration Day in Washington, U.S., January 20, 2025.
U.S. President Donald Trump gestures while signing a series of executive actions in the Oval Office at the White House on Inauguration Day in Washington, U.S., January 20, 2025.

Among his first actions as president, Trump signed an executive order that revives a policy from the final days of his first administration known as Schedule F. The directive creates a new employment classification for tens of thousands of nonpartisan career civil servants, effectively stripping them of job protections by reclassifying them as at-will positions, meaning they can be dismissed for nearly any reason.

A separate executive order froze hiring of federal civilian employees in the executive branch. It stated that any federal civilian position vacant when Trump took office may not be filled, and no new position may be created – with rare exceptions.

More: Trump talks tariffs, Gaza and Greenland, takes jab at Biden in first Oval Office presser

Jan. 28: Buyout offer made to federal employees
U.S. President Donald Trump walks into the East Room before signing the Laken Riley Act, the first piece of legislation passed during his second term in office, at the White House on January 29, 2025 in Washington, DC.
U.S. President Donald Trump walks into the East Room before signing the Laken Riley Act, the first piece of legislation passed during his second term in office, at the White House on January 29, 2025 in Washington, DC.More

Trump’s administration offered buyouts to nearly all 2.3 million federal employees. The offer came in a surprise email that hit inboxes at 6:04 p.m. on Jan. 28 with the subject line: “The Fork in the Road.”

In the email, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management offered all federal employees eight months of pay and benefits through September if they resigned by Feb. 6. Unions warned workers considering Trump’s offer that there is no guarantee the president can or will stick to it because Congress hasn’t approved funding for federal agencies beyond March 14.

Jan. 29: Union sues over reclassifying federal employees

Unions representing federal employees sued the Trump administration to block the schedule F executive order, alleging that it aimed to politicize the federal government by stripping federal workers of job protections.

More: ‘Politics over professionalism’: Federal employees’ union sues Trump over executive order

Feb. 4: USAID employees placed on administrative leave

About 10,000 employees of the United States Agency for International Development ‒ two-thirds of whom work overseas across 60 countries ‒ were notified that they will be placed on administrative leave at the end of the week as part of Trump’s move to dismantle the foreign aid agency.

More: USDA plans big cuts to food bank, school food programs: What to know

Feb. 5: Government warns of furloughs
People protest against the administration of President Donald Trump's decision to virtually shut down the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on February 5, 2025.
People protest against the administration of President Donald Trump’s decision to virtually shut down the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on February 5, 2025.More

The Trump administration warned federal employees that they could be furloughed if they did not accept the buyout offer, according to an email obtained by USA TODAY.

The email warned employees that many will be stripped of civil-service protections and suggested there may be loyalty tests for those who remain.

Feb. 6: Boston judge temporarily halts deadline to accept buyout offer

U.S. District Judge George O’Toole issued a temporary restraining order pausing the Trump administration’s deadline to accept the buyout in order to allow time for labor unions to challenge the plan’s legality. The American Federation of Government Employees and two other unions filed the lawsuit arguing that the administration lacks any statutory basis for the “unprecedented offer.”

More: What to know after federal judge pauses Trump’s buyout deadline for federal workers

The Trump administration’s lawyers had argued that extending the deadline on the very last day would “markedly disrupt the expectations of the federal workforce, inject tremendous uncertainty into a program that scores of federal employees have already availed themselves of, and hinder the administration’s efforts to reform the federal workforce.”

Also on Feb. 6, the administration ordered all federal department and agency heads to produce lists of their lowest-performing employees.

The order from OPM Acting Director Charles Ezell also asked departments and agencies to identify potential barriers to ensuring “the ability to swiftly terminate poor performing employees who cannot or will not improve.”

Feb. 7: Trump fires head of the Office of Special Counsel
Federal workers and supporters hold signs as they demonstrate against Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) outside of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) headquarters on February 07, 2025 in Washington, DC.
Federal workers and supporters hold signs as they demonstrate against Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) outside of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) headquarters on February 07, 2025 in Washington, DC.More

An aide to Trump fired Hampton Dellinger, who leads the Office of the Special Counsel, on the night of Feb. 7 in a one-sentence email. Dellinger sued, arguing that 1978 federal law creating his position states he can only be removed from his job because of inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance.

Probationary employees largely rely on the special counsel to back them when challenging a dismissal through the proper government channels, rather than suing.

Feb. 10: Trump fires leaders of Merit Systems Protection Board
Cathy Harris of the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board poses as she leaves the E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse in downtown Washington, D.C., U.S., March 3, 2025.
Cathy Harris of the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board poses as she leaves the E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse in downtown Washington, D.C., U.S., March 3, 2025.

Within a matter of minutes, Trump fired the leaders of two other boards that federal workers can turn to as an avenue to contest their firing. Union challenges to the firings have been rejected because they have not first gone through these boards.

Trump fired Merit Systems Protection Board chair Cathy Harris, just before 11 p.m., leaving the board with two members – Raymond Limon, a Democrat whose term expired on March 1, and Henry Kerner, a Republican. A court temporarily reinstated Harris, whose term doesn’t expire until 2028, after she sued. The Merit Systems Protection Board is tasked with protecting federal workers against partisan politics and illegal employment practices. It cannot operate without a quorum.

Trump also fired the Federal Labor Relations Authority board chair, Susan Grundmann, three and a half minutes before he fired Cathy Harris. The authority handles certain complaints with federal workers’ labor unions.

Grundmann sued to be reinstated, but for the time being, Trump named Colleen Kiko, a Republican member, as chair, presiding over only one other member, Democrat Anne Wagner.

Also on Feb. 10, a court temporarily reinstated Dellinger, who promptly asked the Merit Systems Protection Board to pause the terminations of six probationary employees at six agencies, and reinstate them while he investigated their cases.

Feb. 11: Trump signs new EO to make major cuts to federal work force

Trump signed an executive order Feb. 11 that seeks to significantly reduce the size of the government by instructing heads of federal departments and agencies to undertake plans for “large-scale reductions in force.”

A White House summary of the order said agency heads were ordered to “coordinate and consult with DOGE to shrink the size of the federal workforce and limit hiring to essential positions.”

Under the order, federal agencies aren’t allowed to hire more than one employee for every four employees who depart. It also instructed the U.S. Office of Personnel Management to create new rules to ensure future federal hires are subject to additional conduct standards, such as U.S. citizenship and filing federal tax returns on time.

Feb. 12: Judge allows buyouts to move forward

O’Toole, the Boston-based federal judge, restored Trump’s buyout project, deciding federal employees unions that sued to stop the program lacked standing to bring their challenge and that his court does not have jurisdiction to hear their complaint.

In total, about 75,000 federal employees accepted President Donald Trump’s buyout offer. That equaled about 3.3% of the federal government’s 2.3 million workers, coming in below the White House’s projections that 5% to 10% of the workforce would accept. Congress has not yet approved spending for the next year or said spending for buyouts would be included.

More: President Trump’s buyouts for federal employees can proceed, judge rules

Feb. 13: Thousands of probationary employees are fired

Thousands of recently-hired federal workers received notice that they had been fired.

Probationary workers are easier to fire because they lack the bargaining rights that career employees have to appeal their terminations. Firings were government-wide: from the Department of Education and Small Business Administration to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Forest Service, the Department of Veterans Affairs and the agency that oversees the nation’s fleet of nuclear weapons.

The firings have continued in the weeks since, including more than 880 probationary employees of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – which forecasts the nation’s weather and protects ocean species – on Thursday.

More: ‘Took away my hope.’ Federal workers say Trump mass firings upended their lives

Supporters of all sizes, attend a rally to support federal workers terminated recently on Friday, March 7, 2025 at the Clement J. Zablocki VA Medical Center at 5000 W. National Ave. in Milwaukee.
Supporters of all sizes, attend a rally to support federal workers terminated recently on Friday, March 7, 2025 at the Clement J. Zablocki VA Medical Center at 5000 W. National Ave. in Milwaukee.
Feb. 20: Unions sue over firing probationary employees

A coalition of federal employee unions sued the administration, alleging that officials misused the probationary period to eliminate staff and that the Office of Personnel Management directed federal agencies to use a standardized termination notice falsely claiming performance issues in firing tens of thousands of employees.

“OPM, the federal agency charged with implementing this nation’s employment laws, in one fell swoop has perpetrated one of the most massive employment frauds in the history of this country, telling tens of thousands of workers that they are being fired for performance reasons, when they most certainly were not,” the unions argued in court documents.

Feb. 22: Five things or resign

Musk took to his social media site, X, to instruct federal workers to report their work accomplishments via email or resign.

“Consistent with President @realDonaldTrump’s instructions, all federal employees will shortly receive an email requesting to understand what they got done last week,” said the post. “Failure to respond will be taken as a resignation.”

The email that employees received did not mention termination or disciplinary action for employees failing to respond promptly, but sent shockwaves as employees got conflicting instructions from agencies about whether or not to respond.

“What did you do last week?” the emails read. “Please reply to this email with approx. 5 bullets of what you accomplished last week and cc your manager.”

Feb. 24: Office of Special Counsel says firing of probationary employees was illegal

Dellinger, who leads the Office of the Special Counsel, said firing probationary employees was illegal because it used boilerplate language blaming their performance rather than specific concerns and asked the Merit Systems Protection Board to decide whether to reinstate six employees while he investigates further.

More: Federal agency investigating Elon Musk’s Tesla hit with DOGE layoffs

Federal law generally requires 60 days’ notice for a reduction in force (what the federal government calls layoffs) and prohibits probationary employees from being fired for reasons unrelated to performance or conduct.

Feb. 25: Merit Systems Protection Board reinstates some probationary employees
A demonstrator wears a USAID vest during a protest against U.S. President Donald Trump's adviser, billionaire Elon Musk's campaign to push out tens of thousands of federal workers, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 25, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard
A demonstrator wears a USAID vest during a protest against U.S. President Donald Trump’s adviser, billionaire Elon Musk’s campaign to push out tens of thousands of federal workers, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 25, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan HowardMore

The Merit Systems Protection Board ordered six fired federal employees to be rehired at least through April 10, while Dellinger’s office investigates.

“I find that there are reasonable grounds to believe that each of the six agencies engaged in a prohibited personnel practice,” stated the order. The Office of Special Counsel has said it is considering ways to seek relief for a broader group of federal employees similarly fired in recent weeks.

Feb. 26: New orders for mass layoffs targeting civil service employees

The Trump administration ordered heads of federal departments and agencies to prepare plans to initiate “large-scale reductions in force” by March 13.

A memo sent by the offices of Personnel Management and Management and Budget also instructed federal departments to eliminate and consolidate duplicative positions, reduce their property footprints and produce reorganization plans for their agencies.

Elon Musk shows off his t-shirt reading "Tech Support" while speaking at the first cabinet meeting hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump, at the White House in Washington, DC, U.S., February 26, 2025.
Elon Musk shows off his t-shirt reading “Tech Support” while speaking at the first cabinet meeting hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump, at the White House in Washington, DC, U.S., February 26, 2025.

Federal employees with full civil service protections are expected to be targeted. U.S. Postal Service workers, positions deemed necessary for law enforcement, national security and border and immigration obligations, as well as military personnel in the armed forces are exempted.

The memo also instructs federal departments to submit new organizational charts by April 14 as well as any proposed relocations of agency offices or headquarters from Washington to “less-costly parts of the country.”

More: Elon Musk talks death threats, DOGE directives at Trump’s first Cabinet meeting

Feb. 27: California judge blocks firing of probationary employees

Judge William Alsup of the U.S. District Court for the Northern California District temporarily blocked the Trump administration from its mass firing of probationary federal employees.

Alsup said the mass firings were likely unlawful and ordered the Office of Personnel Management to halt the action, saying the agency acted out of bounds by telling other agencies – including the Education Department, the Small Business Administration and the Energy Department – to fire employees.

“OPM does not have any authority whatsoever, under any statute in the history of the universe, to hire or fire any employees, but its own,” Alsup said. The judge did not order the rehiring of anyone who had been terminated.

Feb. 28: A second five things email

The administration sent a second round of emails to federal workers instructing them to list what they’ve accomplished that week. The new directive came from agency leaders instead of DOGE.

A terminated federal worker leaves the offices of the U.S. Agency for International Development in Washington, D.C. on February 28, 2025 after being laid off following U.S. President Donald Trump's order to cut funding to the agency.
A terminated federal worker leaves the offices of the U.S. Agency for International Development in Washington, D.C. on February 28, 2025 after being laid off following U.S. President Donald Trump’s order to cut funding to the agency.More

More: How Trump and Musk have sought greater control over federal employees

March 5: Firings are up to agencies

In response to Alsup’s ruling, the Trump administration informed federal departments that any firings of their probationary workers are up to the agencies themselves.

The revised guidance from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management states that “OPM is not directing agencies to take any specific performance-based actions regarding probationary employees,” adding that “agencies have ultimate decision making authority over, and responsibility for, such personnel actions.”

That same day, the Merit Systems Protection Board ordered the U.S. Department of Agriculture to reinstate a fired worker, as well as “numerous” other probationary employees who were fired Feb. 13 and later.

The ruling at the request of the Office of Special Counsel who argued the firings violated federal laws related to probationary employees and reductions in force because they used a form letter that the Department of Agriculture also sent to nearly 6,000 other probationary employees.

March 6: Trump allowed to fire special counsel
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes speaks as New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez, Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison listen during the Community Impact Hearing on the public impact of federal firings and DOGE funding freezes by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration, in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., March 5, 2025.
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes speaks as New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez, Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison listen during the Community Impact Hearing on the public impact of federal firings and DOGE funding freezes by U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration, in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., March 5, 2025.More

More: ‘Blatantly illegal’: Judge reinstates labor board member fired by Donald Trump

A federal appeals court ruled that Trump did have authority to fire Dellinger, the Office of the Special Counsel leader who said firing probationary employees was illegal because agencies used boilerplate language. Dellinger said he would not appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Trump administration has said it will replace Dellinger with Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins. His agency is laying off workers whose main avenue to contest their firing is to turn to the Office of the Special Counsel for help.

March 12: Member back on the Federal Labor Relations Authority

U.S. District Judge Sparkle Sooknanan reversed Trump’s Feb. 10 removal of Grundmann, a Democratic member from the Federal Labor Relations Authority, by issuing a permanent injunction requiring the rest of the board to treat Grundmann as if she had not been removed.

The authority hears disputes between federal agencies and their employees’ union and could play a significant role in expected legal fights over the mass layoffs.

What is ahead?
President Donald Trump, accompanied by Elon Musk, a White House senior advisor, and Tesla and SpaceX CEO, speaks next to a Tesla Model S on the South Lawn of the White House on Tuesday.
President Donald Trump, accompanied by Elon Musk, a White House senior advisor, and Tesla and SpaceX CEO, speaks next to a Tesla Model S on the South Lawn of the White House on Tuesday.

More: ‘We deserve to be heard.’ Fired fed workers begin weekly protests on Capitol Hill

Heads of federal departments and agencies have until Thursday to prepare and present plans to initiate “large-scale reductions in force” as Trump shifts to a more aggressive phase of cutting the federal workforce beyond recently hired or promoted employees.

Among the planned reductions, reported by USA TODAY, are terminations of 76,000 workers from the Department of Veterans Affairs, 1,300 workers from the Department of Education, and more than 1,000 workers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Trump has also openly discussed cuts of 65% to the Environmental Protection Agency’s workforce.

Layoffs are not immediate. Agencies must give employees 30 or 60 days notice.

USA TODAY reporters Joey Garrison, Bart Jansen, Maureen Groppe, Kayla Jimenez, Erin Mansfield and Tom Vanden Brook contributed.

The Wild Upgrade Elon Musk Demanded for His DOGE Office

Daily Beast

The Wild Upgrade Elon Musk Demanded for His DOGE Office

Julia Ornedo – March 12, 2025

Tesla CEO Elon Musk looks at U.S. President Donald Trump as he speaks to the media, at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 11, 2025. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
REUTERS

It seems that the Department of Government Efficiency isn’t done furnishing the federal offices they’ve turned into dorm rooms—and their boss Elon Musk himself has joined in on the fun.

Musk reportedly asked Chris Young, one of his political advisers, to procure a massive TV for his office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building so he could play video games, a source familiar told Politico.

The DOGE chief earlier told friends that he had been sleeping in his DOGE office, in the same way he slept in Tesla factories for years, because he believed it motivated his employees to “give it their all.”

The Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House campus in Washington, U.S., August 2, 2023. REUTERS/Kevin Wurm / REUTERS
The Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House campus in Washington, U.S., August 2, 2023. REUTERS/Kevin Wurm / REUTERS

A longtime GOP field organizer, Young was reportedly hired by Musk in August last year to oversee the America PAC tasked with boosting Republican voter turnout in the November polls. Young has become Musk’s right-hand man for personal and professional logistics in Washington D.C., according to Politico.

Young belongs to the exclusive club of Musk’s most trusted advisers, which is said to be composed of executives who followed the billionaire from his companies. They include former Boring Company CEO Steve Davis, his wife and former X real estate chief Nicole Hollander, and SpaceX Vice President for People Operations Brian Bjelde.

It isn’t just Musk who has turned federal buildings into a personalized office.

DOGE goons have also transformed government offices into crash pads complete with furniture, children’s play areas, and their own washer-dryer, two General Services Administration employees told Politico last week.

Photos and invoices obtained by Politico showed a child’s play area decorated with a stuffed animal and other toys, as well as a $25,000 invoice to install a washer-dryer.

DOGE lackeys have also set up IKEA beds, lamps, and dressers in at least four rooms on the sixth floor of the GSA building. The rooms can only be accessed by people with high-level security clearances, making them difficult to inspect.

“People are definitely … sleeping there,” a GSA staffer told the news outlet.

Former federal employees have speculated that the DOGE team sleeps in their offices to “terrorize the civilian workforce.”

“It’s exceedingly odd,” Jeff Nesbit, an author and former senior official, told Politico. “I’ve run the public affairs offices of five different Cabinet departments or agencies under four different presidents, two Republicans and two Democrats. I have never heard of any such thing.”

Elon Musk Reportedly Wants A Government Shutdown So He Can Get Rid Of Those Pesky Regulators More Easily

Jalopnic

Elon Musk Reportedly Wants A Government Shutdown So He Can Get Rid Of Those Pesky Regulators More Easily

Collin Woodard – March 12, 2025

Elon Musk
Elon Musk – Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Republicans in Washington are once again in disarray, as those who want to avert a government shutdown struggle to find enough votes to pass yet another continuing resolution. If they can’t pass something by Friday night, we’ll be forced to deal with yet another Republican government shutdown. You’d think the party that controls all three branches of government, including both the House and the Senate, would be able to do that easily, but nope. And if Republican infighting sends us into another shutdown, you’ll likely have Tesla CEO Elon Musk to thank. And he doesn’t just want a temporary shutdown, either — Musk wants a permanent one, Wired reports.

According to several sources who Wired agreed not to name, Musk wants a government shutdown because he believes that will make it easier to fire several hundred thousand more workers, especially since judges keep reminding the new administration that breaking the law is illegal. Based on what those sources told Wired, it sounds like Musk’s goal is to fire so many workers that it forces every single agency to operate like we’re in a permanent government shutdown.

That would obviously help Musk achieve his goal of crippling the government’s ability to enforce regulations, but once again, the Republican politicians who could do something to stop him would rather anonymously vent to the media. Doing stuff is hard, y’all. “You know none of this is about saving money, right?” one spineless Republican coward told Wired. “It’s all about destroying a liberal power base.”

Read more: Tesla Cybertrucks Are Rusting Despite Being Made Of Stainless Steel

Regulations, Regulations, Regulations
Elon Musk and Donald Trump
Elon Musk and Donald Trump – Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

If there’s one thing Elon Musk hates, it’s other people telling him he can’t do something. For years, he’s clashed with regulators who very reasonably got mad at him over the horrible working conditions in his factorieshis environmental destructionpossible securities and wire fraud and, of course, overselling what Tesla’s driver-assistance software is capable of. The list is actually far longer than that, but neither one of us has time for me to list every single time Musk’s gotten himself in hot water with regulators. In fact, his desire to get rid of regulators was reportedly the main reason he spent an estimated $300 million to get Trump elected and is now giddily firing veterans and park rangers while making up impossible numbers about alleged waste he couldn’t show you proof of if he tried. Regardless of whether you’re a normal person or a Republican, surely you can agree the American people deserve a better source on so-called Social Security fraud than, “Trust me, bro.”

If Musk could cause a government shutdown, though, all federal employees currently classified as nonessential would immediately be furloughed, which would mean they’d stop getting paid, but more importantly to Musk, they also wouldn’t be allowed to work until Republicans finally managed to pass a continuing resolution to fund the government until the next time Republicans shut it down. A 2023 Partnership for Public Service report estimated the number of workers classified as nonessential is somewhere in the 850,000-person range, although the economic impact of a prolonged shutdown would be even worse since essential workers don’t get paid until the government reopens, either.

But while the stock market is already tanking as a result of Republicans’ terrible policies, what they’ll do behind the scenes is arguably even more concerning. “Maybe they decide that entire government agencies don’t need to exist anymore,” Senator Mark Kelly said Monday.

Gunning For A 30-Day Shutdown
Mike Johnson
Mike Johnson – Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

If Republicans go along with Musk’s plan to shut down the government, workers are still at risk of losing the jobs they aren’t allowed to do or be paid for even before they finally pass another CR. That’s because after 30 days, a Reduction In Force kicks in automatically. Workers with the most seniority and veterans would be prioritized, but triggering the RIF would result in massive staff cuts that would, in turn, cripple all federal agencies. Sure, Republicans would be happy almost no one was left to tell them they couldn’t build giant Give All Employees Cancer machines or whatever it is that the wealthy like to spend money on, good luck getting someone to respond if you try to report the GAEC machine to the feds.

“If you can shut down the government for 30 days, it’s a method of pursuing a RIF,” Nick Bednar, a professor at the University of Minnesota School of Law, told Wired. That said, an RIF during an extended government shutdown would also be new territory for the federal government even in normal circumstances, and in addition to the likely legal challenges, Bednar said the details are still unclear, adding, “How an automatic RIF applies is still up for debate because we’ve never seen it happen.”

And while Trump and his Johnson claim they don’t want to shut down the government, a February 11 executive order directed agency heads to prepare plans for “large-scale reductions in force (RIFs)” with a focus on “all components and employees performing functions not mandated by statute or other law who are not typically designated as essential during a lapse in appropriations as provided in the Agency Contingency Plans on the Office of Management and Budget website.” If you thought that might mean fewer cops, though, they made sure to include an exception for “functions related to public safety, immigration enforcement, or law enforcement.”

Money Has Nothing To Do With It
SpaceX rocket
SpaceX rocket – Brandon Bell/Getty Images

There are probably plenty of ways federal spending could be streamlined, including taking a much closer look at military spending, but don’t let anyone tell you for a single second that firing workers is about improving efficiency and saving money. Firing every single person currently classified as nonessential would only save about $110 billion in payroll expenses annually. There’s a good chance it would save money in the same way buying the cheapest used tires you can find on Craigslist saves you money, but for the sake of the argument, we’ll give them the $110 billion, which anyone who can count will correctly tell you is a truly massive amount of money. That’s also about $890 billion short of the $1 trillion Musk has claimed he wants to cut from the budget, which some quick mental math tells me is way, way more than $110 billion.

In a world where Republicans actually cared about something other than getting rid of regulations and taxes so billionaires like Elon Musk can do whatever they want, no matter how many people they hurt, they wouldn’t be starting with slashing jobs and driving up the unemployment rate because even if Musk fed the entire federal workforce into a woodchipper, it still wouldn’t get him anywhere close to that $1 trillion he talks about. Firing people before you know what they do isn’t great in the private sector, either, but Twitter crashing because you fired the person who could have prevented it isn’t remotely the same thing as a drunk pilot crashing a plane full of people because you fired the people who stop that kind of stuff.

No, you go after the federal workforce first because people doing their jobs get in the way of billionaires doing whatever they want. The more people you manage to get rid of, the easier it is to break the law without consequences.

Shutdowns Are Terrible For The Economy
Mike Johnson
Mike Johnson – Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

While a RIF triggered by a shutdown that furloughs workers for more than 30 days hasn’t happened before, we don’t have to look very far into the past to see how much a prolonged shutdown would hurt the economy. When Republicans shut the government down on December 22, 2018, they didn’t allow the government to reopen until January 25, 2019, meaning it lasted 35 days. A later report from the Congressional Budget Office estimated the shutdown reduced Q1 real GDP by $8 billion, all so Republicans could rile up their base and stick it to the libs or something.

Republicans using a government shutdown as a creative way to get around worker protections and slash jobs also open the government up to lawsuits that are far more likely to succeed, at least before the Republican-controlled Supreme Court steps in, than they were in 2013 when furloughed employees sued for back pay after, you guessed it, yet another Republican government shutdown. They may be gambling on SCOTUS letting them get away with it, but as the previous illegal attempt to cut off all funding for USAID showed, Justices John Roberts and Amy Coney Barrett can’t be counted on to go along with absolutely everything Republicans want. At the very least, give them a creative theory they can run with that isn’t just, “We won the election, so laws we don’t like no longer apply.”

Is that great news? Of course not. Everything Republicans are doing looks, by any objective standard, like their goal is to send us back to 1929. Heck, Trump’s even doing a redux of the Smoot-Hawley tariffs that helped turn a stock market crash into the worst depression this country has ever seen. Hopefully, for the sake of everyone involved except the billionaires, we figure out a way to stop Republicans from succeeding because in addition to the part where we didn’t begin to crawl out of the Great Depression until several years later, it also led to another World War. Surely, unless you’re one of those freaks who believes they can trigger the end times by causing global calamity, you can agree we don’t want that even if you’ve never voted for a Democrat in your life.

More in Politics
HuffPost: Mike Johnson Sets Up Vote To Fund Government So Elon Musk Can Keep Slashing It
NBC News: Trump says he feels ‘very badly’ for fired federal workers but ‘many of them don’t work at all’
Associated Press: Trump overstepped his constitutional authority in freezing Congress’ funding for USAID, judge says

Elon Musk Reportedly Wants the Government to Shut Down So He Can Do Something Dark

Futurism

Elon Musk Reportedly Wants the Government to Shut Down So He Can Do Something Dark

Victor Tangermann – March 12, 2025

Unelected White House official Elon Musk is reportedly hoping the federal government grinds to a halt — so he can dismantle it even more ruthlessly.

As Wired reports, Musk is hoping that a government shutdown could allow him to more easily fire hundreds of thousands of federal workers, a potentially existential threat for many government agencies.

His purported desire could fly in the face of the interests of the Trump administration. Earlier this week, the Washington Post reported, the White House tried to convince House Republicans to vote for a stopgap measure, called a continuing resolution, to fund the government through September.Advertisement

With a Friday deadline looming, the measure would need Democratic votes in the Senate. But whether they’ll fall in line remains uncertain. Trump’s escalating trade war has sparked a major stock market crash, straining relations with Congress.

Yet a shutdown could end up being beneficial to Musk’s continued plundering of the federal government. The mercurial CEO has been ransacking agencies with the help of his so-called Department of Government Efficiency.

“A shutdown has been his preference,” a Republican source told Wired. “I think he’s boxed in there by the president. I think it would be really hard for him to get around that.”

As The Hill reports, Senate Democrats are caught between a rock and a hard place. They either have to fund the government and stop a potentially calamitous shutdown that could drag on for weeks or even months — or oppose the continuing resolution to ensure the Trump administration doesn’t get what it wants.

A shutdown could prove disastrous, even without Musk firing workers left and right, leading to close to one million “nonessential” government workers being furloughed.

But even putting all of those workers on ice could only save roughly $110 billion a year, falling far short of the $1 trillion Musk hopes to eliminate by 2026.

Shutdown or not, Musk has been eviscerating government agencies with alacrity. The Department of Education announced this week it would cut half of its workforce, which could prove to be a debilitating blow.

And a shutdown could make things far worse. After 30 days, some furloughed workers could become permanently laid off as part of “reduction in force” proceedings.

“There are concerns anyone deemed nonessential will be DOGE’d,” a State Department employee told Wired.

What exactly will happen if it drags on for that long remains unclear given the lack of precedent. Only one partial shutdown has lasted over 30 days, starting in late 2018.

And many other workers could eventually be forced out as they look for other sources of income.

“I suspect the greatest impact of a long-term shutdown is that it will encourage federal employees to leave public service sooner rather than later,” University of Minnesota School of Law professor Nick Bednar told Wired. “Even though federal law permits back pay, federal employees still need to pay for rent, groceries, and other essentials.”

Trump’s FBI Moves to Criminally Charge Major Climate Groups

The New Republic – Opinion

Trump’s FBI Moves to Criminally Charge Major Climate Groups

Malcolm Ferguson – March 12, 2025

The FBI is moving to criminalize groups like Habitat for Humanity for receiving grants from the Environmental Protection Agency under the Biden administration.

Citibank revealed in a court filing Wednesday that it was told to freeze the groups’ bank accounts at the FBI’s request. The reason? The FBI alleges that the groups are involved in “possible criminal violations,” including “conspiracy to defraud the United States.”

“The FBI has told Citibank that recipients of EPA climate grants are being considered as potentially liable for fraud. That is, the Trump administration wants to criminalize work on climate science and impacts,” the @capitolhunters account wrote Wednesday on X. “An incoming administration not only cancels federal grants but declares recipients as criminals. All these grantees applied under government calls FOR ENVIRONMENTAL WORK, were reviewed and accepted. Trump wants to jail them.“

The Appalachian Community Capital Corporation, the Coalition for Green Capital, and the DC Green Bank are just some of the nonprofits being targeted.

“This is not fraud. This is targeted harassment,” @capitolhunters continued. “The idea of criminalizing community climate work wouldn’t have originated at the FBI—it likely comes from EPA director Lee Zeldin, who today cut all EPA’s environmental justice offices, which try to reduce pollution in poor and minority communities.”

Zeldin’s order eliminates 10 EPA regional offices as well as the one in Washington, D.C.

Elon Musk’s DOGE has worked quickly to cut federal agencies. Here’s a list of what’s been targeted so far.

Business Insider

Elon Musk’s DOGE has worked quickly to cut federal agencies. Here’s a list of what’s been targeted so far.

Grace Eliza Goodwin – March 6, 2025

  • Trump established the Department of Government Efficiency to cut federal spending and root out waste.
  • Under Elon Musk, DOGE has already targeted a number of federal agencies, including USAID and the DoD.
  • Here’s a list of the government programs and agencies DOGE has gone after so far.

Since returning to the White House, President Donald Trump has wasted little time sending his newly created DOGE office after federal agencies.

On his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order officially creating DOGE. With billionaire SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk as its de facto leader, the group has taken swift action toward its stated goal of rooting out government fraud, waste, and abuse of taxpayer dollars.

Here’s a list of the agencies DOGE has targeted so far and other key initiatives from the new organization.

Social Security Administration

The Trump administration has sent DOGE to find fraud within the Social Security Administration, arguing that the agency sends out payments to dead Americans. A Business Insider analysis of recent SSA audits found that errors like overpaying beneficiaries and paying dead people amount to less than 1% of the SSA’s total benefits payouts — far less than Trump and Musk have claimed.

The SSA — which manages Social Security benefits and payouts — has been the target of DOGE’s sweeping reduction of the federal workforce, cuts that SSA workers have warned could delay payments to beneficiaries and hinder frontline workers’ ability to handle claims and issue Social Security cards.

As part of the Trump administration’s efforts to restructure the SSA, the agency banned its workers from reading the news on their work devices. One worker told BI that they sometimes need to access news sites to, for example, confirm deaths through obituaries, and without that ability, recipients’ claims could be slowed down.

Department of Defense

DOGE is now going after the Department of Defense, the oldest and largest government agency in the US, with a total budget of over $800 billion.

In early February, Trump said that he expected DOGE to “find billions, hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud and abuse” in the Pentagon. That includes what Trump’s national security adviser Mike Waltz has called the “absolute mess” of US shipbuilding.

DOGE posted on X on February 14 that it had begun looking into the DoD.

“Great kickoff with @DeptofDefense,” the post said. “Looking forward to working together to safely save taxpayer dollars and eliminate waste, fraud and abuse.”

DOGE staffers have been at the Pentagon collecting lists of probationary employees across defense agencies, and it’s expected that many could soon be terminated, people familiar with the matter told The Washington Post.

Internal Revenue Service

DOGE has set its sights on the IRS.

The task force sought access to the Internal Revenue Service’s data system that houses highly sensitive information about every taxpayer, nonprofit, and business in the country, The Washington Post reported on February 16.

The IRS considered granting DOGE broad access to its systems and data, including its Integrated Data Retrieval System, which lets IRS workers view and adjust taxpayer accounts and data, the Post reported.

But The White House later agreed to block DOGE’s full access to the IRS’s payment systems, instead granting read-only access of taxpayer data that has been anonymized, the Post reported on February 20, citing people familiar with the arrangement.

Before the agreement to make the data anonymous and read-only was reached, officials sounded alarm bells about the kind of access DOGE would have. Even within the IRS, access to this data is strictly monitored, and employees are prohibited form accessing their own files or those of their friends and family, according to the agency’s employee handbook.

Democratic Senators Ron Wyden of Oregon, a ranking member of the Committee on Finance, and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, a ranking member of the Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, wrote a letter to the IRS on February 17 urging DOGE to disclose the extent of its access to IRS systems.

The senators argued that giving DOGE access to sensitive taxpayer data raises “serious concerns that Elon Musk and his associates are seeking to weaponize government databases containing private bank records and other confidential information to target American citizens and businesses as part of a political agenda.”

The IRS was also one of several federal agencies where probationary employees were fired en masse. The agency’s enforcement of tax evasion could be hit especially hard by the cuts.

And the IRS is working up plans that could cut its 90,000-person workforce in half through a variety of layoffs, attrition, and incentivized buyouts, the Associated Press reported on March 4 citing people familiar with the matter.

The IRS did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

National Institutes of Health

The National Institutes of Health — the federal agency that funds and conducts medical research under the Department of Health and Human Services — announced in a directive on February 7 that it was cutting how much of its funding can be used for administrative overhead.

The NIH said it would be placing a 15% cap on “indirect costs” related to research projects, which includes things like personnel, facility maintenance, and equipment. The NIH said on X that this limit would save the agency $4 billion per year, “effective immediately.”

After separate lawsuits from state attorneys general and organizations representing hospitals and research institutions, a federal judge temporarily blocked the funding cuts in February, and in March, extended that pause in a preliminary injunction.

The NIH has also been targeted by Trump and Musks’s widespread staffing cuts across the federal workforce, with the agency losing over 1,100 staffers, according to an internal email obtained by Reuters.

Federal worker layoffs

As part of Trump and Musk’s promise to reduce the federal budget, the Trump administration has laid off thousands of probationary workers — typically, employees who have been in their roles for less than two years — from a wide swath of federal agencies.

That includes workers at the Forest Service, the Office of Personnel Management, Small Business Administration, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Department of Education, the Federal Aviation Administration, the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Internal Revenue Service, Veterans Affairs, and the Environmental Protection Agency.

Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the agency that provides healthcare to more than 160 million Americans, said in a press release on February 5 that its officials were working with DOGE to find “opportunities for more effective and efficient use of resources in line with meeting the goals of President Trump.”

In response to a post containing a Wall Street Journal article about CMS collaborating with DOGE, Musk wrote on X, “Yeah, this is where the big money fraud is happening.”

On February 12, a group of 32 Democratic Senators wrote a letter to Trump urging him and Musk to keep their “hands off Medicare or Medicaid.”

“DOGE is invading CMS, posing immeasurable risks to Americans’ health care,” the letter reads. “DOGE representatives, with no training or expertise, could make unilateral, politically motivated decisions to target both beneficiaries and health care providers while blocking access to care and essential payments for services.”

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

NASA is also on DOGE’s hit list.

While at the Commerce Space Conference in Washington DC on February 12, the space agency’s acting administrator said that NASA was expecting a visit from DOGE.

“So we are a federal agency. We are going to have DOGE come. They are going to look — similarly to what they’ve done at other agencies — at our payments,” said Janet Petro, in comments reported by Bloomberg.

On February 14, the space agency confirmed to Flying, an aviation-focused magazine, that DOGE staff were on-site to review its payments.

NASA has done quite a lot of business with Musk’s own space company, SpaceX, amounting to around $14.5 billion in contracts between the two.

In a February 6 letter to NASA’s Janet Petro, Democratic Representatives Zoe Lofgren, a ranking member of the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology and Valerie Foushee, a ranking member of the Subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics, demanded the space agency provide answers on whether it was working with DOGE.

And in a follow-up letter sent on February 21, the representatives — now joined by Rep. Emilia Sykes, a ranking member of the Subcommittee on Investigations and Oversight — again urged the agency to disclose the extent to which it is working with DOGE, arguing that Musk’s involvement is a dangerous conflict of interest.

Department of Education

Trump has repeatedly said he wants to shut down the Department of Education (ED). On February 12, he told reporters that he wants the department closed “immediately,” adding that it “is a big con job.”

Along with some GOP lawmakers, Trump has said that education should be handled at the state and local level, and that a federal agency isn’t necessary.

On February 12, DOGE said that it had cancelled a number of ED contracts — including a “$4.6M contract to coordinate zoom and in-person meetings,” a “$3.0M contract to write a report that showed that prior reports were not utilized by schools,” and a “$1.4M contract to physically observe mailing and clerical operations.”

The cost-cutting group has also said that it has terminated 89 contracts at the ED, totaling $881 million.

Trump has said that he wants his newly confirmed education secretary, Linda McMahon, to put herself out of a job — a task McMahon herself hinted at in an email to ED staff about the agency’s “historic final mission.” And that may come sooner rather than later — Trump is expected to imminently issue an executive order disbanding the Education Department, the Wall Street Journal reported in March, citing people familiar with the matter.

DEI Initiatives

On his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order terminating federal roles, offices, and programs related to diversity, equity, and inclusion.

And on January 31, just 11 days into its existence, DOGE announced it had terminated 104 government contracts related to DEI programs and initiatives.

DOGE said the cuts — spanning 30 agencies including the Federal Aviation Administration, Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Personnel Management, Environmental Protection Agency, and many more — created over $1 billion in savings.

US Agency for International Development

Musk has been working to shut down the US Agency for International Development, which funds humanitarian efforts around the world. As the world’s largest provider of humanitarian aid, the US channeled nearly $32.5 billion through the agency in 2024, providing aid to countries like Ukraine, Jordan, and Ethiopia.

In a post on X on February 3, Musk accused the agency of being a “criminal organization” and said he “spent the weekend feeding USAID into the wood chipper.” Hours later, USAID workers were told to stay home from work, and within days, the agency announced that all direct hire personnel would be placed on leave globally, with a few exceptions — a move that would have reduced its workforce from over 10,000 employees to less than 300.

Following a lawsuit from federal employee labor unions, a federal judge partially blocked Musk and Trump’s attempted shutdown of USAID — which legal experts argue is illegal without approval from Congress. The judge’s order temporarily blocked the Trump administration from placing USAID workers on leave, first until February 14, and in another extension, until at least February 21.

But by the end of February, USAID workers were told to clear out their desks at the agency’s Washington, DC headquarters after the Trump administration said it was ending 90% of the department’s contracts.

On March 5, the Supreme Court ruled against the Trump administration‘s freeze on foreign aid, allowing the release of nearly $2 billion in foreign aid funds.

Experts have warned that a shutdown of USAID would make China more powerful on the world stage.

Federal worker buyout

As part of Musk and Trump’s efforts to trim government spending and reduce the federal workforce, the Trump administration emailed a buyout offer to around 2 million government employees. The deferred resignation, sent by the Office of Personnel Management at the end of January, offered to pay employees their full salary and benefits through September, without the need to work during that time, in exchange for their resignation.

The offer was met with mass confusion, shock, and outrage from federal employees, many of whom questioned whether the government could actually promise to pay them through September with a looming government shutdown in March when current funding runs out.

The offer appeared to come straight out of Musk’s playbook, right down to the title of the email sent to federal workers: “Fork in the Road.”

After federal labor unions filed a lawsuit arguing that the offer is illegal, a federal judge twice extended the deadline for employees to accept the buyout, but ultimately ruled that it can proceed.

The offer finally closed on February 12, with 75,000 workers accepting the buyout, according to the Office of Personnel Management.

Federal Aviation Administration

Following the deadly American Airlines plane crash in Washington DC in January, Musk announced he would be going after the Federal Aviation Administration.

Days after the crash, Musk wrote on X that the FAA’s “primary aircraft safety notification system failed for several hours,” adding that, as a result, Trump gave the DOGE team his approval to “make rapid safety upgrades to the air traffic control system.”

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy confirmed Musk’s role, saying the DOGE team was “going to plug in to help upgrade our aviation system.”

Republican Senator Ted Cruz of Texas — who chairs the committee that oversees the FAA — said he’s confident in Musk’s ability to upgrade the FAA, adding that the American people should take “real comfort in his ability to navigate complicated technologies.”

Not everyone has so much faith in Musk.

Democratic Senator Maria Cantwell of Washington argued in a letter to Duffy that, as the CEO of SpaceX, Musk has a clear conflict of interest that should prohibit his involvement with the FAA.

Last year, the FAA proposed fining SpaceX more than $600,000 for two occasions where the rocket company is said to have violated its launch licenses.

On February 19, Duffy said on X he had enlisted SpaceX engineers “to help upgrade our aviation system.”

The FAA said in a statement to Business Insider on February 25 that it had begun testing out a SpaceX Starlink internet terminal at its facility in Atlantic City and two terminals at its “non-safety critical sites in Alaska.”

Treasury Department

Trump said he granted Musk and his DOGE team access to the Treasury department’s digital payments system, which controls trillions of dollars in payments to Americans — everything from Social Security benefits to tax refunds.

The Treasury Department said Musk’s team was only granted “read-only” access to the system, but the move still sparked criticism, particularly from Democratic lawmakers and federal workers’ unions. The unions sued the Treasury Department, arguing that the agency had illegally granted Musk access to sensitive personal and financial information.

Trump defended Musk’s access to the platform, telling reporters it was only so that DOGE could find additional areas to cut government waste.

“Elon can’t do and won’t do anything without our approval, and we will give him the approval where appropriate,” Trump said.

On February 14, the Treasury Department’s acting inspector general said in a letter obtained by the AP that he was launching an audit of the payment system’s security controls and would be looking into whether any “fraudulent payments” had been made, as Musk has alleged. The Government Accountability Office also said it would be opening a probe into DOGE’s access to the payment system, according to a letter sent to lawmakers that was obtained by Politico.

For now, a federal judge has barred DOGE officials from accessing the Treasury Department’s sensitive payments systems until a lawsuit alleging the access is illegal concludes.

Federal Emergency Management Agency

Trump has threatened to overhaul, or entirely scrap, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which provides aid to Americans following natural disasters like Hurricane Milton and the LA wildfires.

The president has called the agency, which employs more than 20,000 staff around the US, a “very big disappointment” that is “very bureaucratic,” “very slow,” and costs “a tremendous amount of money.”

On February 10, Musk wrote on X that “FEMA betrayed the American people by diverting funds meant for natural disasters to pay for luxury hotels for illegal migrants.”

But New York City officials said that FEMA had correctly allocated the funds, which were never part of a disaster relief grant and were not used on luxury hotels, as Musk had said, The New York Times reported.

Hours after Musk’s post, FEMA’s acting director, Cameron Hamilton, posted on X that the payments had been suspended and that the responsible personnel will be held accountable.

On February 11, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security announced that four FEMA officials had been fired in connection to the payments, including the agency’s Chief Financial Officer, two program analysts, and a grant specialist.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

On February 6, a group of Democratic lawmakers accused “unelected and unvetted associates of Elon Musk and the so-called Department of Government Efficiency” of targeting the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The NOAA is in charge of forecasting the weather, analyzing climate data, and tracking extreme weather events.

Senator Chris Van Hollen and Congressman Jamie Raskin, along with other Maryland Democrats, penned a letter alleging that DOGE bureaucrats had been visiting NOAA headquarters, housed within the Department of Commerce, with the intent to break up the agency and merge it with the Department of the Interior.

In their letter, the lawmakers urged the leaders of the US Department of Commerce, Howard Lutnick and Jeremy Pelter, to maintain the independence and integrity of the NOAA, as Lutnick had promised to do in his confirmation hearing.

The lawmakers argue that DOGE is illegally attacking NOAA without congressional approval, in an attempt to dismantle and privatize the agency which they say would rob American farmers, businesses, and citizens of crucial, life-saving services.

The Trump administration has already laid off hundreds of workers at NOAA, which meteorologists say will degrade weather forecasts and public safety.

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Musk has repeatedly called for the elimination of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was established in 2011 after the Great Recession to oversee financial products and services offered to Americans. It seeks to protect Americans from financial scams and abusive practices, like excessive overdraft fees.

“CFPB RIP,” Musk wrote on X on February 7 next to a tombstone emoji.

Trump’s Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent ordered the CFPB to halt most of its work and told the consumer watchdog agency to stop issuing “public communications of any type.”

The CFPB has told staffers to “not perform any work tasks” while it shuts down its DC headquarters amid an uncertain future.

The agency followed up by sending termination notices to dozens of employees, some of whom had already accepted the buyout offer, sources familiar with the situation told CNBC.

The agency’s first director, Richard Cordray, has warned that shuttering the CFPB would turn the consumer finance world into the “wild, wild west,” adding that Musk’s attempted shutdown is unethical and, with his plans to offer financial services through X, could be considered a conflict of interest.

Productivity email sent to federal employees

DOGE sent a mass email to federal workers on Saturday, February 22 asking them to provide five bullet points explaining what work tasks they had accomplished in the past week. They were given a Monday night deadline to respond, and if they didn’t, Trump threatened that they could be “semi-fired” or “fired.” While at first Musk said anyone who didn’t respond would be terminated, he later changed course to say workers would be given another chance.

The “What did you do last week?” email, sent by the Office of Personnel Management, followed Trump’s instruction to Musk to”get more aggressive” in reducing the size of the federal workforce.

In a post on X on February 24, Musk explained the email as “basically a check to see if the employee had a pulse and was capable of replying to an email.”

The email caused mass confusion among federal workers, who received conflicting guidance from their superiors on whether to respond or not.

It’s not yet clear how the differing guidance across federal agencies will be resolved, but Musk said on X that the “mess will get sorted out this week.”

“Lot of people in for a rude awakening and strong dose of reality,” his post continued. “They don’t get it yet, but they will.”

More in U.S.
The Daily Beast: WATCH: Tiny Gov Agency Blocks DOGE Goons From Building in Heated Standoff
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Some DOGE employees are earning six-figure taxpayer-funded salaries from the federal agencies they are shutting down

Fortune

Some DOGE employees are earning six-figure taxpayer-funded salaries from the federal agencies they are shutting down

Beatrice Nolan – March 5, 2025

Some DOGE employees are being paid six-figure salaries.
  • DOGE, Elon Musk’s cost-cutting government task force, was set up to eliminate inefficiencies—but some of its staff are reportedly earning hefty six-figure salaries while slashing federal jobs. Musk had initially claimed positions within DOGE would be “tedious work” where “compensation is zero.”

Some employees at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), established to reduce bureaucracy and streamline federal agencies, are taking home six-figure taxpayer-funded salaries, according to reports.

While DOGE has aggressively downsized government offices, some of its own members are earning top-tier federal salaries, Wired reported.

Jeremy Lewin, a key figure in dismantling USAID and reshaping other agencies, makes over $167,000 per year, the report said. While Kyle Schutt, a software engineer working within the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, takes home $195,200, per Wired, which is the federal pay ceiling.

Others, including 28-year-old tech entrepreneur Nate Cavanaugh, also earn six-figure salaries.

Elon Musk initially claimed that positions at DOGE would be “tedious work” where “compensation is zero.” While other DOGE employees, like Edward Coristine, Luke Farritor, and Derek Geissler, appear to be unpaid volunteers, a full picture of the department’s salaries has been difficult to establish.

Some DOGE employees hold other designations, including “Special Government Employee” (SGE) status, which allows them to bypass standard federal employment rules, maintain outside income, and avoid certain financial disclosures.

Musk has no official link to DOGE, despite being the face of the cost-cutting team, and is instead listed as an SGE, which limits him to an advisory role for a maximum 130-day work period. SGE positions can be either paid or unpaid.

Representatives from DOGE and the GSA did not respond to a request for comment from Fortune.

DOGE’s government cuts

DOGE’s influence over the federal government has been sweeping.

The team has enacted aggressive cost-cutting and restructuring efforts.

It was instrumental in shuttering various government agencies, including USAID and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and has overseen the firing of thousands of federal employees.

The department has also accessed sensitive citizen data within The Treasury and IRS, raising concerns from Democratic lawmakers and prompting legal challenges.

It recently played a key role in shutting down 18F—a government tech unit focused on improving digital services—and has overseen mass layoffs within the General Services Administration (GSA).

DOGE has proposed various other future initiatives to save funds, including a proposal to sell off more than 500 federal buildings.

Musk, who does not take a salary for his work with DOGE, remains the world’s richest person with a net worth of more than $350 billion. His companies, including Tesla and SpaceX, have received over $38 billion in government contracts and subsidies over the years.

Despite Musk’s claims of transparency, the department has not publicly disclosed full details of its spending or hiring practices. DOGE claims to post its activities on a public “wall of receipts,” run via a feed on X. However, the team has backtracked on a significant amount of the savings it claimed to have achieved and quietly deleted several of the posts.

Musk has consistently defended DOGE’s work against critics. He has emphasized the need to reduce government spending and modernize the federal government to eliminate inefficiencies.

The billionaire has been putting pressure on federal employees to report their productivity. Last week, he emailed all government employees, asking them to list five things they had achieved the previous week—or risk being fired.

trump fires more Veterans than any president in history, and he’s not done yet: Trump’s VA secretary defends 80,000 layoffs in a wildly unpersuasive way

MaddowBlog: From The Rachel Maddow Show

Trump’s VA secretary defends 80,000 layoffs in a wildly unpersuasive way

Defending deep cuts at his agency, VA Secretary Doug Collins said, “The federal government does not exist to employ people.” He’s badly missing the point.

By Steve Benen – March 6, 2025

You’re Fired !

As recently as last week, Donald Trump told reporters that the White House is keeping track of the number of military veterans who are losing their jobs as a result of his administration’s policies. “We hope it’s going to be as small a number as possible,” the president said.

As a practical matter, those “hopes” don’t appear to be amounting to much. Thousands of veterans have already been laid off as a result of the White House’s agenda, even as veterans’ benefits are put in jeopardy by Elon Musk and his DOGE operation.

It was against this backdrop that Trump’s Veterans Affairs Department announced this week that it’s laying off 80,000 workers as part of an agencywide reorganization. While the precise total of veterans who’ll lose their jobs as part of this effort hasn’t yet been announced, it stands to reason that the number will be significant: Veterans make up a disproportionate share of federal employees in general, and at the VA, the percentage is likely to be even higher.

The White House’s Alina Habba told reporters this week that military veterans affected by the DOGE-led layoffs may not be “fit to have a job at this moment.”

As it turns out, she wasn’t the only member of Trump’s team making controversial comments about veterans headed for the unemployment line. NBC News reported on Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins, who released a video via social media this week, sharing his perspective on the developments.

“Now, we regret anyone who loses their job, and it’s extraordinarily difficult for me, especially as a VA leader and your secretary, to make these types of decisions,” Collins said in the video. “But the federal government does not exist to employ people. It exists to serve people.”

But no one has ever argued that the federal government exists to employ people. The point has always been that those who work on agencies such as the VA are there to serve Americans who need assistance.

If Collins or other Republicans want to argue that the department can lay off 80,000 people and not sacrifice care or benefits for veterans at all, they’re welcome to make the case. The fact that they’ve offered no such assurances suggests benefit cuts for those who served are, at a minimum, on the table for the Trump administration.

The Cabinet secretary added in the same video, “We’ll be making major changes, so get used to it.” But therein lies the rub: If you’re an injured veteran, worried about what Trump and his team have in store for the trimmed down VA, getting “used to” fewer services and less care is a life-changing proposition.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement, “Slashing nearly 80,000 VA staff is a benefit cut by another name. This staffing cut is a betrayal of our promise to our service members. It will mean longer wait times, fewer appointments, less health care service for our veterans.”

The New York Democrat added, in reference to the VA cuts, “It is outrageous. No one in America bargained for this and Democrats are going to fight this tooth and nail working with our veterans service organizations to fight these awful, unfair cuts that take out the desire to give tax cuts to billionaires on our veterans who served us so well. This is just one of the most outrageous things they have done and there’s a long list.”

Steve Benen

Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MSNBC political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”