*
Musk cost-cutting targets agencies disliked by
conservatives,
not major budget contributors
*
DOGE claims $37.69 billion savings to date - a fraction of
its
$2 trillion target
*
Nine of the government agencies in Musk's sights were
mentioned
in controversial Project 2025 report
By Tim Reid, Helen Coster and James Oliphant
WASHINGTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) - The first phase of the
rapid-fire effort by Tesla CEO Elon Musk and President
Donald Trump to cut waste from government agencies appears
driven more by an ideological assault on federal agencies long
hated by conservatives than a good-faith effort to save taxpayer
dollars, according to two veteran Republican budget experts.
Since Trump's inauguration on January 20, Musk has dispatched
members of his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to
scrutinize sensitive personnel and payment information in
government computer systems and led a successful drive to
dismantle two agencies - one that provides a lifeline to the
world's needy and another that protects Americans from
unscrupulous lenders.
But Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former Republican director of the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO), said the agencies Musk and
Trump have targeted to date account for a tiny fraction of the
overall federal budget, which is projected to reach $7 trillion
this fiscal year, according to the CBO.
"They are not going to go into agencies that are doing
things they like. They are going into agencies they disagree
with," Holtz-Eakin, who has participated in past tax and
spending negotiations in Congress, told Reuters.
Trump, a Republican, says he is "very proud" of what he
describes as a vital initiative to turn off the spigot of
wasteful spending. With Musk standing behind him in the Oval
Office, Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday broadening
DOGE's remit, telling government agencies to work with DOGE to
cut staff and limit hiring.
Speaking to reporters, Musk responded to critics who say he is
an unelected official who has been granted unprecedented
authority by the president to dismantle parts of the U.S.
government. "You can't have an autonomous federal bureaucracy.
You have to have one that's responsive to the people," Musk
said.
He pledged to find $1 trillion in savings through his
efforts to identify fraud and waste in the government.
An online DOGE "live tracker" claimed on Tuesday that the
department has saved taxpayers $37.69 billion since it began
work on January 20 but did not provide evidence of how that
figure was reached.
Of the 15 agencies Musk's team have targeted so far, nine were
singled out for elimination or downsizing in Project 2025, a
controversial 900-page blueprint compiled by conservative
think-tanks to remake the U.S. government. The document claims
many federal government agencies have been taken over by a
left-wing elite who use taxpayer dollars to push a liberal
agenda that is "weaponized against conservative values".
Trump distanced himself from the project during the 2024
election after an uproar over some of its more far-reaching
proposals, but a number of the authors are now in his
administration.
Bill Hoagland, a former Republican staffer and director of
the Senate Budget Committee for more than 20 years, said the
cost-cutting efforts so far have been designed to play to
Trump's base, and have been "low hanging fruit for ideological
reasons."
"The playbook has not been for the dollar savings, but more
for the philosophical and ideological differences conservatives
have with the work these agencies do," Hoagland said.
CONSERVATIVE TARGETS
There is little disagreement in Washington on the need to
cut waste and fraud and make the U.S. government more efficient.
The complaint by federal workers and Democratic lawmakers is the
blunt force approach favored by Musk has upended the lives of
thousands of public servants overnight.
Musk's team have taken over or sent DOGE workers into the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), charged
with providing weather forecasting and climate data; the
Department of Education, whose mandate includes prohibiting
discrimination in schools and colleges; the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, which protects consumers from exploitative
lenders; the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID),
the government's main foreign aid organization; and the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which responds to natural
disasters.
Many Republicans have long seen these agencies as pushing
liberal agendas that are harmful to U.S. interests. Together
they constitute a fraction of federal spending. USAID disbursed
about $72 billion in aid in fiscal year 2023, according to
government figures, or around 1% of total federal outlays.
Conservatives have talked about closing the Education
Department since Republican Ronald Reagan was president in the
1980s, in the belief that the federal government has no business
being involved in schools and universities. More recently Trump
and his allies have accused the department of foisting "woke"
policies such as advocating for transgender players on girls'
sports teams.
NOAA has been widely criticized by Republicans for what they
say is an exaggeration of climate change threats, while USAID is
accused of sending billions of dollars in aid each year to some
countries not seen as American allies.
Republicans have also railed against the CFPB since its creation
in the wake of the 2008 financial crash, declaring it an example
of liberal overreach. Last week as Musk's staff entered the
agency, he posted "CFPB RIP" on his X social media account and
on Monday staff were sent home and the agency was shuttered.
Stephen Moore, a former economic adviser to Trump who
welcomes DOGE's effort, said he opposes spending taxpayer
dollars on government bureaucrats pushing liberal policy
agendas.
"If you walk down the halls of USAID or the Department of
Education you're not going to find any conservatives," Moore
said. "It's really important they defund the left."
Musk, DOGE and the White House did not respond to requests
for comment for this story.
MUSK'S TWEETS
Musk has also used his X social media platform to attack
several agencies targeted by DOGE, according to a Reuters review
of 1,120 of his posts between February 3 and February 10, a week
in which DOGE staffers began expanding their reach.
He agreed with an X user that USAID was part of a system
involved in "money laundering" taxpayer dollars "into far-left
organizations", and repeated the baseless conspiracy theory that
FEMA was helping people to enter the country illegally.
The Government Accountability Office, a congressional
watchdog agency, estimates that the U.S. government loses
between $233 billion and $521 billion each year due to fraud and
improper payments.
The real test for Musk and Trump, Holtz-Eakin and Hoagland
said, will be whether and when they tackle the huge drivers of
government spending: Social Security, the government-run pension
system; Medicare, a government-run health insurance program for
seniors; and Medicaid, which provides health insurance for low
income families.
Together they account for nearly half of the federal budget, and
are popular with Republican and Democratic voters. Trump said on
the campaign trail Social Security and Medicare are off the
table.
Yet members of DOGE recently accessed payment systems at the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, suggesting Medicare
may not be exempt from cuts.
Hoagland agreed that any attempts to tackle the big
entitlement programs will be politically treacherous.
"That is where the rubber is going to hit the road,"
Hoagland said. "They will have a lot more difficulty
ideologically and politically going after those."