Musk
Wields Scythe on Federal Work Force, With Trump’s Full Blessing
The
president defended Elon Musk’s role in seeking to slash budgets and cut
payrolls as the young aides burrowing into federal agencies came under
scrutiny.
Erica L.
GreenMichael D. Shear
By Erica L.
Green and Michael D. Shear
Erica L.
Green and Michael D. Shear cover the White House.
Feb. 7, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/07/us/politics/trump-musk-doge-pentagon.html
President
Trump’s statement on Friday that he had directed Elon Musk to turn his
budget-slashing initiative on the Pentagon underscored Mr. Musk’s rapidly
expanding role in their charge to shrink the federal bureaucracy and stomp out
any opposition to the president’s agenda.
At a White
House news conference, Mr. Trump said Mr. Musk would also be examining the
Education Department. It is one more corner of the government, from the
Treasury Department to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, now under the
scrutiny of the band of young and inexperienced operatives under Mr. Musk’s
direction.
In the first
three weeks of the new administration, Mr. Musk’s cost-cutting team has swiftly
inserted itself into at least 17 federal agencies, according to a tally by The
New York Times.
Both the
billionaire and Mr. Trump have defended the disruptive actions of his young
aides, even as some of them have come under scrutiny for their past actions.
One Musk
aide, Marko Elez, a 25-year-old former employee of X, resigned on Thursday
after The Wall Street Journal revealed that he had made racist posts on X. On
Friday, Mr. Musk called for the Journal reporter to be fired and said he was
reinstating Mr. Elez, a move that both the president and vice president said
they supported.
“We
shouldn’t reward journalists who try to destroy people,” Vice President JD
Vance posted on X.
Another
young aide, Edward Coristine, was fired in June 2022 from an internship at Path
Network, an Arizona-based data security company, after “an internal
investigation into the leaking of proprietary company information that
coincided with his tenure,” the company said in a statement Friday. Bloomberg
first reported his firing.
Mr. Musk’s
team suffered at least a temporary setback on Friday when a federal judge put
on hold the effort to put much of the staff of the U.S. Agency for
International Development on administrative leave and order home its overseas
workers.
Neither Mr.
Trump nor Mr. Musk has appeared to be deterred, though, by any of the initial
legal constraints placed on them by the courts. Both seem intent on carrying
through with a program of personnel purging and budget cutting that they have
claimed could save billions or even trillions of dollars.
Asked at the
news conference if there was anything in the federal government that Mr. Musk
had been told not to touch with his cost-cutting effort, Mr. Trump replied:
“Well, we haven’t discussed that much.” He added: “I guess maybe you could say
some high intelligence or something. And I’ll do that myself if I have to.”
Members of
Mr. Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency visited the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau on Friday, according to a person familiar with the
matter. At least two members of Mr. Musk’s team — Nikhil Rajpal and Gavin
Kliger — are now listed in the agency’s employee directory, the person said on
condition of anonymity in the absence of authorization to speak publicly.
Sending Mr.
Musk into the Pentagon, the department with the single biggest discretionary
budget, creates a clear conflict of interest: The Defense Department has
billions of dollars in contracts with Mr. Musk through SpaceX and other
companies he owns.
The Defense
Department relies on Mr. Musk to get most of its satellites into orbit and
works closely with his companies on a variety of other initiatives. His
companies were promised $3 billion across nearly 100 different contracts last
year with 17 federal agencies.
Mr. Trump
had said earlier that he would be mindful of any conflicts of interest posed by
Mr. Musk’s vast business holdings. “If there’s a conflict,” Mr. Trump said this
week, “then we won’t let him get near it.” But on Friday he expressed no such
concern.
“I’ve
instructed him to go check out Education, to check out the Pentagon, which is
the military,” Mr. Trump said, referring to Mr. Musk, during a news conference
with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba of Japan.
Defense
Secretary Pete Hegseth responded to the announcement on social media on Friday
night, saying that he was looking forward to working with Mr. Musk. “Need to
cut the fat (HQ) and grow the muscle (warfighters),” he wrote.
During the
news conference earlier Friday, Mr. Trump praised Mr. Musk’s operation, saying
that so far the office had identified massive amounts of waste and fraud. He
pointed to large percentages of employees who had been “dismissed” at the U.S.
Agency for International Development.
Mr. Trump
said that he didn’t anticipate a purge of that scale at the Defense Department,
“but you’ll find some things that are pretty bad.” And he indicated that he
would not seek to rein in Mr. Musk’s operation. Mr. Trump that Mr. Musk would
be going through “just about everything.”
He defended
the actions of Mr. Musk’s team.
“I’m very
proud of the job that this group of young people, generally young people, but
very smart people, they’re doing,” the president said. “They’re doing it at my
insistence. It would be a lot easier not to do it, but we have to take some of
these things apart to find the corruption.”
Asked about
a new Time magazine cover showing Mr. Musk behind the Resolute Desk in the Oval
Office, Mr. Trump mocked the magazine but defended Mr. Musk.
“Elon is
doing a tremendous job,” Mr. Trump said. “He’s wanted to be able to do this for
a long time.”
Nicholas
Nehamas, Kate Conger, Ryan Mac and Theodore Schleifer contributed reporting.
Erica L.
Green is a White House correspondent, covering President Trump and his
administration. More about Erica L. Green
Michael D.
Shear is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Biden
and his administration. He has reported on politics for more than 30 years.
More about Michael D. Shear


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