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What DOGE Is Accomplishing

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Elon Musk, the relentless force driving electric vehicle dominance and SpaceX into the cosmos, has redirected his insatiable appetite for disruption toward an unexpected target: the sprawling machinery of the U.S. federal government.

On January 20, 2025, through an executive order signed by President Trump, Musk took charge of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), a new entity tasked with dismantling bureaucratic bloat and curbing excessive federal spending.  Far from a ceremonial position, this role has positioned Musk as a one-man audit squad, equipped with a mandate to cut through decades of accumulated waste.

What began as a fiscal experiment has transformed into something more revealing: a relentless spotlight on the Democrat party’s entrenched priorities; operational dependencies; and, increasingly, strategic struggles in the face of Musk’s unorthodox crusade.  His involvement doesn’t just threaten budgets or jobs; it exposes the fault lines in Democrats’ rhetoric and resilience, forcing them into a reactive scramble that’s as public as it is politically perilous.

Musk’s DOGE mission began with a promise to modernize federal technology and eliminate waste, a goal that resonates with fiscal conservatives.  Reports from NBC News indicate that within weeks, DOGE operatives were integrated into almost every federal agency, targeting inefficiencies and laying off tens of thousands of workers.  Musk himself has claimed to have fed agencies like the U.S. Agency for International Development “into the woodchipper,” a move that has sparked lawsuits and outrage from Democrats who view it as an attack on essential services.

This aggressive stance has put Democrats on the defensive, and Musk’s actions are revealing layers of what some Republicans describe as Democratic hypocrisy.  For example, when DOGE shut down a multi-million-dollar grant program for dairy businesses in Wisconsin, Democrat lawmakers scrambled to save it — despite their frequent criticism of corporate welfare.  Musk’s team pointed to the program as an example of excessive spending, forcing Democrats to justify their preferred projects in real time.  CNN noted that whereas Republicans directly texted Musk to negotiate reversals, Democrats struggled, lacking the personal access to influence him.

Musk’s visibility — brandishing a literal chainsaw at CPAC — amplifies this dynamic.  His posts on the X platform, which reach over 219 million followers, dismiss Democrat objections as performative, framing their resistance as evidence of entrenched interests.  This narrative aligns with Trump’s rhetoric, as demonstrated in his joint address to Congress, where he lauded DOGE for revealing “hundreds of billions” in fraud — claims that Reuters later alleged were exaggerated.  Nevertheless, the spectacle keeps Democrats responding rather than leading, highlighting their difficulty in countering a tech titan who flourishes on disruption.

One key point of exposure is the Democrats’ reliance on the federal bureaucracy.  The Atlantic reports that as DOGE slashes agencies like the FAA and IRS, Democrats warn of widespread harm to Americans, yet their messaging often feels abstract compared to Musk’s tangible cuts.  For instance, when DOGE operatives were briefly barred from the U.S. African Development Foundation, Democrats hailed it as resistance, but Musk’s team still gained access, highlighting the former’s inability to halt his momentum.  This depicts Democrats as defenders of a status quo that many voters, according to Politico, view as wasteful.

Musk’s personal style further underscores the disarray within the Democrat party.  His interview with Fox Business revealed plans to double DOGE’s staff, indicating no retreat despite pushback from congressional Democrats and even some figures within Trump’s Cabinet.  Democrats, unable to wield subpoena power while in the minority, cannot investigate Musk’s potential conflicts of interest, such as Tesla’s scrutiny by the CFPB or SpaceX’s contracts with NASA.  Instead, they are compelled to file lawsuits — 17 against DOGE alone — while Musk and Trump dismiss these actions as partisan noise.

Republicans, meanwhile, leverage Musk’s clout.  Politico notes that he’s met with GOP senators, reassuring them amid voter angst over cuts, while NBC News reports he’s shaping shutdown negotiations.  Sidelined Democrats decry DOGE as an oligarchic overreach, but their critiques lack punch without concrete countermeasures.  Musk’s “ghost employee” obsession, rooted in his Twitter takeover, now targets federal payrolls, forcing Democrats to defend workers whose roles he questions — often without clear evidence.

Critics like David French argue that DOGE’s theatrics — chainsaws and all — won’t address structural deficits, exposing Democrat fiscal critiques as equally hollow.  Yet Musk’s real impact may be political: The New York Times suggests that Democrats see him as a “serious liability” for Trump, with private polling swapped among operatives.  Their new ads cast Musk as an unelected overlord, but his unpopularity hasn’t slowed DOGE’s march.

As Trump reins in Musk’s authority — clarifying that Cabinet secretaries control staffing, per NBC News — Democrats gain little traction.  Musk’s retort — “If they don’t cut, then Elon will” — keeps him central, per The Guardian.  His DOGE website, riddled with errors, still projects savings that Democrats struggle to debunk effectively.

In this chaos, Musk isn’t just reshaping government; he’s exposing Democrats as reactive, divided, and ill equipped to counter a disruptor who thrives on their discomfort.



<p><em>Image: JD Lasica via <a data-cke-saved-href=

Image: JD Lasica via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 2.0 (cropped).

American Thinker

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