Amid Democratsâ pushback, lawsuits, and threats to DOGE employees, the cuts keep comingâincluding almost $1 billion announced on Feb. 10.
After three weeks, Elon Muskâs Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has made over $1 billion in cuts, according to to numbers from the White House.
DOGE also ended a $748 million contract for a new embassy in South Sudan.
Smaller cuts hit subscriptions for the news outlet Politico from NASAâ$500,000âand $26 million in contracts for âexecutive coachingâ and âstrategic communication.â
DOGEâs X account unveiled almost $1 billion in additional cuts on the evening of Feb. 10.
Rep. Blake Moore (R-Utah), co-chair of the bipartisan House DOGE Caucus, told The Epoch Times DOGE was âgoing through and creating some wavesâand theyâre definitely creating some airwaves.â
Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D-N.Y.) told The Epoch Times that DOGE was designed âto take from the poor to give to the rich.â
âI feel that a lot of it is illegal,â he added.
The DOGE Fight
DOGE is a time-limited organization repurposed from the United States Digital Services and situated in the Executive Office of the President. Before Election Day in 2024, Trump announced his intentions to create DOGE and place tech entrepreneur Musk, by that point a key campaign benefactor, at its helm.
Its interactions with other executive-branch agencies, including the Department of Labor and the Treasury Department, have sparked protests attended by Democrats from the House and Senate, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).

Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and other Democrats protest outside the Department of Labor in Washington on Feb. 5, 2025. Labor groups and Democrats were opposing access to department data by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), Elon Musk’s time-limited commission. Nathan Worcester/The Epoch Times
DOGE and its advocates have toted up wins and losses in the courts, where litigation concerning the commission and its employees is proliferating.
A hearing in the case is scheduled for Feb. 14.
The cuts and legal maneuvers are playing out as Musk and DOGEâs engineers face threats, including on social media.
A review of material on the social media platform Bluesky by The Epoch Times found numerous posts naming and, in multiple cases, threatening Musk and DOGE staff. One anonymous user named various DOGE engineers, referring to them as âNazi scumâ before adding, âThe only good nazi is a dead nazi.â
As Musk and his engineers surf a wave of reaction, economists concerned about the debt and deficit have responded to DOGEâs cuts with both enthusiasm and skepticism.
Ryan Bourne, who co-authored a report on DOGE for the libertarian Cato Institute, told The Epoch Times in an email that DOGE âcould have a big qualitative impact, both on permanently changing the character of the civil service and undermining public trust in certain programs through a drumbeat of stories about wasteful spending.â
âYou have to stop cutting taxes and then address Social Security, Medicare, defense, and a lot of other popular programs. Wake me when the GOP goes there,â Riedl wrote, adding, âDonât brag about your coupon-clipping frugality at the same time you are buying a $250,000 Ferrari.â
Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wisc.), a retired Navy Seal, is handling the Veterans Affairs and Pentagon portfolios for the House DOGE Caucus.
âI could very, very reasonably cut tens of billions of dollars and improve veteransâ experiences, health care outcomes, education benefits. And we can do the same thing with the Department of Defenseâget rid of these legacy programs that arenât working, and then weâll increase lethality and readiness,â he told The Epoch Times.
He would not comment on whether the outcome would be a lower overall Defense Department budgetâa sticking point for many congressional Republicans seeking more money for the Pentagon.
Rep. Eric Burlison (R-Mo.), another pro-DOGER, said DOGEâs concern with Medicare or Social Security is confined to spotting âimproper payments.â Medicaid, he told The Epoch Times, presents more opportunities for immediate reform.
âI think there are ways we can make these systems work and save quite a bit,â he said of the federal governmentâs large social programs.
âIf we get to that point after we address the low-hanging fruit and we still have a problem, then at that point, we can address that,â Burlison added.
âThe US does need that great reform. But this isnât the time. Get through the first year, maybe build a record of success,â Cochrane wrote on his blog, The Grumpy Economist.
Bourne, of the Cato Institute, also sees DOGE as a potential on-ramp for larger changes.
âSome might argue that the only way to get buy-in for entitlement reform in the future is to show the public youâve made every effort to root out waste, mismanagement, and non-priority spending areas from the budget already,â he told The Epoch Times.
He said he suspects federal lawmakers must act to shore up DOGEâs movesâa goal that could face resistance in a narrowly divided Congress caught in perpetual battles over funding.
On the other side of the aisle, Sens. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and James Lankford (R-Okla.) have introduced packages of DOGE-related bills. Ernst created the Senateâs DOGE Caucus, of which Lankford is also a member.

Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) speaks during an interview with The Epoch Times at his office on Capitol Hill in Washington on Jan. 30, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times
Moore, the House DOGE Caucus co-chair, told The Epoch Times pro-DOGE lawmakers were engaged in âparallel work,â independent of Musk and DOGE, though with some communication between Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and DOGE.
Moore said he had not recently communicated with DOGE, though there was some communication when it began.
In time, the parallel work in the executive and legislative branches âwill converge,â Moore added.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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