A Mystery
Solved: Amy Gleason, a Former Health Care Executive, Is Running DOGE
Ms. Gleason
is the acting administrator of the Department of Government Efficiency,
according to a White House official. The news comes as a federal judge
questioned who was leading the operation.
Nicholas
Nehamas Kate Conger Ryan Mac
By Nicholas
NehamasKate Conger and Ryan Mac
Nicholas
Nehamas reported from Washington, and Kate Conger and Ryan Mac reported from
San Francisco.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/25/us/politics/amy-gleason-doge-administrator.html
Feb. 25,
2025
Amy Gleason,
a former health care investment executive, is serving as the acting
administrator of the Department of Government Efficiency, the
government-overhaul task force imposing dramatic changes across the federal
bureaucracy under the direction of Elon Musk, a White House official said on
Tuesday.
For two
weeks, the Trump administration had resisted answering inquiries about who was
formally leading the effort, which reports to the White House. Mr. Musk, who is
the world’s richest man and a key adviser to President Trump, has been clearly
driving the initiative, including by instigating an email to all federal
employees on Saturday that instructed them to list their accomplishments during
the last week.
But the
White House has insisted in court that Mr. Musk is not the administrator of the
cost-cutting team, adding to the sense of opacity surrounding it. On Monday, a
federal judge pressed the government for clarity about the billionaire’s role,
expressing concern that unauthorized individuals were effectively running the
office.
On Tuesday,
a name was revealed: Ms. Gleason is the temporary leader of what is formally
known as the U.S. DOGE Service, according to the White House official, who was
not authorized to speak publicly.
Mr. Trump
created the office on Inauguration Day through an executive order, transforming
a White House tech unit that had been established under President Barack Obama.
Since then, staffers hired by Mr. Musk and his aides have fanned across the
government and sought access to sensitive databases, scrutinized federal
employees and even tried to shutter whole agencies.
Ms. Gleason
did not immediately respond to a request for comment. She was scheduled to be
on vacation in Mexico on Tuesday and told associates that she was not aware
ahead of time that the White House planned to make public her role, according
to people familiar with the situation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity
out of fear of retaliation.
Ms. Gleason,
a career official who worked at the digital service unit during Mr. Trump’s
first term, rejoined the agency late last year, according to people familiar
with her role and documents reviewed by The New York Times.
During the
first Trump administration, the digital agency — which stations tech workers
throughout the federal government to assist with modernization efforts — had
posted Ms. Gleason with the Health and Human Services Department, where she
worked on Covid response, according to documents seen by The Times.
Ms. Gleason
has focused on health care reforms, which she said during a TEDx presentation
in 2020 was inspired by her frustrations with the medical system after her
daughter was diagnosed with a rare illness. After Mr. Trump’s first term, she
joined Brad Smith, a health care executive who had worked with Mr. Trump’s
son-in-law Jared Kushner on the Covid response, at an investment firm focused
on health companies, taking the role of chief product officer.
Late last
year, Mr. Smith began advising Mr. Musk’s cost-cutting efforts and eventually
brought Ms. Gleason, who is based in Nashville, into the discussions, according
to people familiar with the situation.
On Dec. 30,
more than three weeks before Inauguration Day, Ms. Gleason was reintroduced at
the digital service office as a “new hire” on an internal Slack channel,
according to documents viewed by The Times.
“My previous
time at USDS was incredibly meaningful — full of challenges, successes, and
unforgettable experiences,” Ms. Gleason wrote as part of a “new hire spotlight”
document seen by The Times. “I’m excited to meet new colleagues and dive into
impactful projects once again.”
In January,
Ms. Gleason met regularly with Mr. Smith and Steve Davis, a top aide to Mr.
Musk, at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, where Mr. Musk has set up
his DOGE offices, a person familiar with her work said.
In recent
weeks, Ms. Gleason has overseen the transition of the digital service agency
into Mr. Musk’s operation. Through executive order, Mr. Trump moved it from the
Office of Management and Budget, where it had been housed since its founding,
into the White House — a transition that effectively shielded its work from
open records laws that could give the public insight into its operations.
During an
all-hands meeting with staffers last week, Ms. Gleason told employees that they
should adopt a “one team” mentality and work closely with their new
counterparts, including dozens of young engineers and lawyers Mr. Musk
recruited to help him overhaul the federal bureaucracy.
But the
takeover of the office has not gone smoothly. On Tuesday, 21 employees at
U.S.D.S. announced their resignations, protesting the incursion on the federal
government by Mr. Musk and his allies.
“We will not
use our skills as technologists to compromise core government systems,
jeopardize Americans’ sensitive data, or dismantle critical public services,”
the group wrote in its letter. “We will not lend our expertise to carry out or
legitimize DOGE’s actions.”
Before Ms.
Gleason’s role was revealed, reporters had urged the White House press
secretary, Karoline Leavitt, to name the agency’s administrator on Tuesday at a
daily briefing for the news media.
“I’m not
going to reveal the name of that individual from this podium,” Ms. Leavitt
replied. “I’m happy to follow up and provide that to you. But we’ve been
incredibly transparent about the way that DOGE is working.”
Theodore
Schleifer contributed reporting.
Nicholas
Nehamas is a Washington correspondent for The Times, focusing on the Trump
administration and its efforts to transform the federal government. More about
Nicholas Nehamas
Kate Conger
is a technology reporter based in San Francisco. She can be reached at
kate.conger@nytimes.com. More about Kate Conger
Ryan Mac
covers corporate accountability across the global technology industry. More
about Ryan Mac
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