Some
Trump Officials Push Back Against Musk’s Ultimatum to Workers
The F.B.I.
director, Kash Patel, the director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, and
others told employees not to respond to a directive from Mr. Musk to summarize
their accomplishments.
Chris
CameronMaggie Haberman
By Chris
Cameron and Maggie Haberman
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/23/us/politics/elon-musk-email-federal-workers.html
Feb. 23,
2025
Several
Trump-appointed agency leaders urged federal workers not to comply with Elon
Musk’s order to summarize their accomplishments for the past week or be removed
from their positions, even as Mr. Musk doubled down on his demand over the
weekend.
Their
instructions in effect countermanded the order of Mr. Musk across much of the
government, challenging the broad authority President Trump has given the
world’s richest man to make drastic changes to the federal bureaucracy. The
standoff serves as one of the first significant tests of how far Mr. Musk’s
power will extend.
As the
directive ricocheted across the federal government, officials at some agencies,
including the F.B.I., the office coordinating America’s intelligence agencies
and the Departments of Defense, State, Energy, Health and Human Services and
Homeland Security, told their employees not to respond.
Mr. Musk’s
email had even reached the inboxes of sitting federal judges — who are in the
judicial branch, not the executive. The administrative office for the federal
courts advised judges and staff that “this email did not originate from the
judiciary or the administrative office and we suggest that no action be taken.”
The public
pushback reflects a growing unease — and, in some cases, alarm — behind the
scenes across the Trump administration about the perception of Mr. Musk’s
unchecked power.
The unease
runs from lower staff to some cabinet secretaries, who have tired of having to
justify specific intricacies of agency policy and having to scramble to address
unforeseen controversies that Mr. Musk has ignited.
Those
officials are aware that he has influence over the president privately, and
they fear him using X, the social media website he owns, to single out people
he views as obstructing him, according to one senior administration official.
Hours after
a senior Defense Department official publicly and firmly pushed back on Mr.
Musk’s directive on Sunday afternoon, Mr. Musk singled him out for retribution,
saying on X that “anyone with the attitude of that Pentagon official needs to
look for a new job.”
One person
who was quiet about the controversy throughout much of the weekend was Mr.
Trump; after posting on social media on Saturday morning that he wanted Mr.
Musk to be more “aggressive,” and then bragging about the purge of federal
workers in a speech hours later, the president had remained mute on the subject
for much of Sunday.
That
afternoon, however, Mr. Trump posted a meme, which he said came from Mr. Musk,
mocking federal workers who had to explain their duties and accomplishments,
but he did not weigh in on the internal government conflict between his
appointees.
Mr. Musk’s
public statements about his cost-cutting effort, known as the Department of
Government Efficiency, have often expressed an open contempt for the federal
work force, which includes some of Mr. Trump’s supporters.
By Sunday
afternoon, some of the pushback against Mr. Musk from administration officials
— coming in large part from the national security apparatus and law enforcement
agencies — had become public and explicit.
“The
Department of Defense is responsible for reviewing the performance of its
personnel and it will conduct any review in accordance with its own
procedures,” Darin S. Selnick, the acting Pentagon official in charge of
personnel, said in a statement, instructing Pentagon employees to “for now,
please pause any response.”
Tulsi
Gabbard, the director of the office of national intelligence, ordered all
intelligence community officers not to respond, in a message to intelligence
officials reviewed by The New York Times.
“Given the
inherently sensitive and classified nature of our work, I.C. employees should
not respond to the OPM email,” Ms. Gabbard wrote.
Kash Patel,
the F.B.I. director, wrote in an email to employees that “the F.B.I., through
the office of the director, is in charge of all our review processes,” telling
workers that they should “for now, please pause any responses.”
Senior
personnel officials at the State and Homeland Security Departments also
instructed their employees to not respond to the email.
At the
Justice Department and F.B.I., the threatening signals from Mr. Musk were met
with a mix of anger and amazement that anyone would issue such a blanket demand
without consideration for sensitive areas such as criminal investigations,
legal confidentiality or grand jury material.
Some law
enforcement supervisors quickly told employees to wait for more guidance from
managers on Monday before responding to the demand, according to current and
former officials.
Other
departments gave conflicting guidance. The Department of Health and Human
Services told its employees on Sunday morning to follow the directive. An hour
later, an email from the Trump-appointed acting director of the National
Institutes of Health, a subordinate agency, told employees to hold off on
responding. Hours later, the health department told all employees to “pause”
responses to the ultimatum.
On Saturday,
Mr. Musk posted a demand for government employees to summarize their
accomplishments for the week, warning that failure to do so would be taken as a
resignation. Soon after, the Office of Personnel Management, which manages the
federal work force, sent an email asking civil servants for a list of
accomplishments, but it did not include the threat of removal for not
complying.
Unions
representing federal workers suggested that Mr. Musk’s order was not valid.
They advised their members to follow guidance from their supervisors on how,
and whether, to respond to the email.
In a
scathing letter on Sunday, Everett B. Kelley, the president of the American
Federation of Government Employees — the largest federal employee union — told
the acting director of the Office of Personnel Management that the email sent
to federal employees was “plainly unlawful” and “thoughtless.”
Mr. Kelley
demanded that the order be retracted, and noted, “By allowing the unelected and
unhinged Elon Musk to dictate O.P.M.’s actions, you have demonstrated a lack of
regard for the integrity of federal employees and their critical work.”
Multiple
intelligence agencies, including the National Security Agency, had warned
employees that responding could risk inadvertently disclosing classified work.
Although Mr.
Musk’s original email told employees not to include classified material,
current and former intelligence officials said that if an adversary gained
access to thousands of unclassified accounts of intelligence officers’ work
that it would be able to piece together sensitive details or learn about
projects that were supposed to remain secret.
Representative
Mike Lawler, a New York Republican whose seat may be among the most fiercely
contested in 2026, raised doubt about the order even as he gave broader support
to Mr. Musk’s cost-cutting effort.
“I don’t
know how that’s necessarily feasible,” Mr. Lawler said of the ultimatum.
“Obviously, a lot of federal employees are under union contract.”
Senator Lisa
Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, also criticized Mr. Musk’s order.
“Our public
workforce deserves to be treated with dignity and respect for the unheralded
jobs they perform,” she wrote in a statement on social media. “The absurd
weekend email to justify their existence wasn’t it.”
It is
unclear what legal basis Mr. Musk would have to justify mass firings based on
responses to the email, and the White House and the Office of Personnel
Management did not immediately answer questions about the threat of removal.
But Mr. Musk
— who made similar unconventional demands during his takeover of Twitter, now
known as X — insisted on Sunday morning that the order amounted to “a very
basic pulse check.”
In a series
of posts, Mr. Musk also promoted baseless claims of wage fraud — that a
significant number of “non-existent” or dead people were employed in the
federal work force, and that criminals were using the fake employees to collect
government paychecks.
“They are
covering immense fraud,” Mr. Musk said in response to a post by a supporter
that said that “the left is flipping out about a simple email.”
His claims
echo a similar one that tens of millions of dead people may be receiving
fraudulent Social Security payments. A recent report by the Social Security
Administration’s inspector general — a watchdog that investigates the program
for waste, fraud and abuse — found that “almost none” of the people in the
agency’s database who had likely died were receiving payments.
Reporting
was contributed by Julian E. Barnes, Hamed Aleaziz, Apoorva Mandavilli, Devlin
Barrett, Rebecca Davis O’Brien, Ken Bensinger, Kate Conger, Sheryl Gay
Stolberg, Adam Goldman, Minho Kim, Kate Zernike, Lisa Friedman and Margot
Sanger-Katz.
Chris
Cameron covers politics for The Times, focusing on breaking news and the 2024
campaign. More about Chris Cameron
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent, reporting on the second,
nonconsecutive term of Donald J. Trump. More about Maggie Haberman


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário