WaPo - U.S. government officials privately warn Musks blitz appears illegal (Gift link)
The billionaires DOGE team has launched an all-out assault on federal agencies, triggering numerous legal objections.
By Jeff Stein, Dan Diamond, Faiz Siddiqui, Cat Zakrzewski, Hannah Natanson and Jacqueline Alemany
at 5:52 p.m. EST 22 minutes ago
The chaotic blitz by Elon Musks Department of Government Efficiency has triggered legal objections across Washington, with officials in at least a half-dozen federal agencies and departments raising alarms about whether the billionaires assault on government is breaking the law.
Over the past two weeks, Musks team has moved to dismantle some U.S. agencies, push out hundreds of thousands of civil servants and gain access to some of the federal governments most sensitive payment systems. Musk has said these changes are necessary to overhaul what hes characterized as a sclerotic federal bureaucracy and to stop payments that he says are bankrupting the country and driving inflation.
But many of these moves appear to violate federal law, according to more than two dozen current and former officials, one audio recording, and several internal messages obtained by The Washington Post. Internal legal objections have been raised at the Treasury Department, the Education Department, the U.S. Agency for International Development, the General Services Administration, the Office of Personnel Management, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the White House budget office, among others.
So many of these things are so wildly illegal that I think theyre playing a quantity game and assuming the system cant react to all this illegality at once, said David Super, an administrative law professor at Georgetown Law School.
Specific concerns include the terms of the deferred resignation Musks team is offering to purge the civil service which experts say runs afoul of federal spending law and whether Musks staffers will use Treasurys payment system to reverse spending that has already been approved. (Two federal employee unions sued Monday to block DOGE from accessing that system. Late Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent wrote to Congress that DOGE associates have only read-only access to it.) Several federal officials said they were worried about DOGEs taking control of government systems that hold Americans personal information, including student loan data, and others have raised privacy concerns about the agencys vow to use artificial intelligence on government databases. In other instances, officials have raised concerns that DOGE associates appeared to violate security protocols by using private email addresses or not disclosing their identities on government calls.
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