Tag Archives: Department of Government Efficiency

Supreme Court halts lower court orders requiring DOGE to hand over information about work and personnel

Washington — The Supreme Court on Friday halted lower court orders that required the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency to turn over information to a government watchdog group as part of a lawsuit that tests whether President Trump’s cost-cutting task force has to comply with federal public records law.

The order from the high court clears DOGE for now from having to turn over records related to its work and personnel, and keeps Amy Gleason, identified as its acting administrator, from having to answer questions at a deposition. Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented.

“The portions of the district court’s April 15 discovery order that require the government to disclose the content of intra–executive branch USDS recommendations and whether those recommendations were followed are not appropriately tailored,” the court said in its order. “Any inquiry into whether an entity is an agency for the purposes of the Freedom of Information Act cannot turn on the entity’s ability to persuade. Furthermore, separation of powers concerns counsel judicial deference and restraint in the context of discovery regarding internal executive branch communications.”

The Supreme Court sent the case back to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit for more proceedings.

Chief Justice John Roberts temporarily paused the district court’s order last month, which allowed the Supreme Court more time to consider the Trump administration’s bid for emergency relief. A district judge had ordered DOGE to turn over documents to the group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, by June 3, and for Gleason’s deposition to be completed by June 13.

The underlying issue in the case involves whether DOGE is subject to the Freedom of Information Act. CREW argues that the cost-cutting task force wields “substantial independent authority,” which makes it a de facto agency that must comply with federal public records law.

The Justice Department, however, disagrees and instead claims that DOGE is a presidential advisory body housed within the Executive Office of the President that makes recommendations to the president and federal agencies on matters that are important to Mr. Trump’s second-term agenda. 

DOGE’s agency status was not before the Supreme Court, though the high court may be asked to settle that matter in the future. Instead, the Trump administration had asked the justices to temporarily halt a district court’s order that allowed CREW to gather certain information from DOGE as part of its effort to determine whether the task force is an advisory panel that is outside FOIA’s scope or is an agency that is subject to the records law.

The judge overseeing the dispute, U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper, had ordered DOGE to turn over certain documents to the watchdog group by June 3 and to complete all depositions, including of Gleason, by June 13.

Mr. Trump ordered the creation of DOGE on his first day back in the White House as part of his initiative to slash the size of the federal government. Since then, DOGE team members have fanned out to agencies across the executive branch and have been part of efforts to shrink the federal workforce and shutter entities like the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Institute of Peace.

DOGE has also attempted to gain access to sensitive databases kept by the Internal Revenue Service, Social Security Administration and Office of Personnel Management, prompting legal battles.

In an effort to learn more about DOGE’s structure and operations, CREW submitted an expedited FOIA request to the task force. After it did not respond in a timely manner, CREW filed a lawsuit and sought a preliminary injunction to expedite processing of its records request. The organization argued that DOGE was exercising significant independent authority, which made it an agency subject to FOIA.

Cooper granted CREW’s request for a preliminary injunction in March and agreed that FOIA likely applies to DOGE because it is “likely exercising substantial independent authority much greater than other [Executive Office of the President] components held to be covered by FOIA.”

He then allowed CREW to conduct limited information-gathering, which the watchdog group said aimed to determine whether DOGE is exercising substantial authority that would bring it within FOIA’s reach. A federal appeals court ultimately declined to pause that order, requiring DOGE to turn over the documents sought by CREW.

In seeking the Supreme Court’s intervention, Solicitor General D. John Sauer said CREW is conducting a “fishing expedition” into DOGE’s activities. He warned that if Cooper’s order remains in place, several components of the White House, such as the offices of the chief of staff and national security adviser, would be subject to FOIA.

“That untenable result would compromise the provision of candid, confidential advice to the president and disrupt the inner workings of the Executive Branch,” Sauer wrote. “Yet, in the decisions below, the court of appeals and district court treated a presidential advisory body as a potential ‘agency’ based on the persuasive force of its recommendations — threatening opening season for FOIA requests on the president’s advisors.”

But lawyers for CREW told the Supreme Court in a filing that the Justice Department’s position “would require courts to blindly yield to the Executive’s characterization” of the authority and operations of a component of the Executive Office of the President.

They said adopting the Trump administration’s approach to DOGE would give the president “free reign” to create new entities within the Executive Office of the President that exercise substantial independent authority but are shielded from transparency laws.

“Courts would be forced to blindly accept the government’s representations about an EOP unit’s realworld operations, unable to test those representations through even limited discovery,” CREW’s lawyers wrote. “It is that extreme position, not the discovery order, that would ‘turn[] FOIA on its head.'”

Source link

Timeline: How Trump and Musk’s relationship has unfolded over the years — from feud to alliance, and back again

The alliance between President Trump and Elon Musk went up in flames Thursday, days after the world’s richest man left the administration and tried to wield his influence to kill a massive budget bill that is central to enacting the president’s top legislative priorities. 

Their spat played out in public and marked another remarkable turn for Musk, who spent tens of millions on Mr. Trump’s reelection campaign and was given the reins to slash the size of the federal government. 

Here’s a look back at how Mr. Trump and Musk got here: 

Trump “not the right guy,” Musk says in 2016 

The Tesla CEO praised Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s economic and environmental policies as “the right ones” in an interview with CNBC before the 2016 election. 

“I feel a bit stronger that he is not the right guy,” Musk said of Mr. Trump at the time. “He doesn’t seem to have the sort of character that reflects well on the United States.”

“I don’t think this is the finest moment in our democracy,” Musk added. 

Musk joins — and quits — Trump administration roles

Shortly after Mr. Trump’s first term began, Musk joined a handful of White House advisory boards, including Mr. Trump’s “manufacturing jobs council.”

But Musk left those roles just months later, citing Mr. Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris Climate Accords.

“Climate change is real. Leaving Paris is not good for America or the world,” Musk tweeted in June 2017.

Musk continued to have a close relationship with the federal government, however, as his rocket company SpaceX has billions in contracts with NASA and other agencies. 

Mr. Trump praised Musk at a 2020 SpaceX launch in Florida, saying at one point: “I speak to him all the time. Great guy. He’s one of our great brains. We like great brains. And Elon has done a fantastic job.”

President Trump talks with Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk at the White House on Feb. 3, 2017.

Evan Vucci / AP


Musk sours on Democrats in 2022 — but still feuds with Trump

In May 2022, Musk said he was ending his support for Democrats because “they have become the party of division & hate.” 

“So I can no longer support them and will vote Republican,” Musk tweeted, later adding that he voted for Clinton in 2016 and former President Joe Biden in 2020. 

But just two months later, Musk suggested he didn’t support Mr. Trump launching another run for the White House amid a public spat with the then-former president over the course of several days in July 2022. Mr. Trump called the Tesla CEO a “b—s— artist” at a rally and said his companies would be “worthless” without federal backing, while Musk tweeted Mr. Trump should “hang up his hat & sail into the sunset.”

Later in 2022, Musk purchased Twitter, now known as X, and quickly reinstated Mr. Trump’s account, which had been suspended since the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The reinstatement came four days after Mr. Trump announced his third run for the presidency after losing to Biden.

In the Republican presidential primary, Musk initially threw his support behind one of Mr. Trump’s rivals, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. In May 2023, the billionaire and the Floridian appeared together on a glitchy Twitter livestream to launch DeSantis’ campaign.

Musk endorses Trump in 2024, wields influence  

The tech billionaire formally endorsed Mr. Trump on July 13, 2024, moments after Mr. Trump survived an assassination attempt at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. 

“I fully endorse President Trump and hope for his rapid recovery,” Musk wrote alongside video of the bloodied presidential candidate raising his fist in the air as he was surrounded by Secret Service agents. 

Musk joined Mr. Trump on the campaign trail and spent roughly $277 million to help elect him and other Republican candidates, mostly through a Musk-backed super PAC called America PAC, campaign finance records show.

Mr. Trump shouted Musk out during his election night victory speech: “A star is born,” Mr. Trump said. “He’s an amazing guy.”

Before Mr. Trump was inaugurated for a second term, Musk used his political influence in December 2024 to whip up outrage against a bipartisan spending bill and torpedo it days before a potential government shutdown. 

Elon Musk jumps on the stage as President Trump speaks at a campaign rally at the Butler Farm Show on Oct. 5, 2024 in Butler, Pa.

Evan Vucci / AP


Musk joins Trump administration, spearheading DOGE 

Mr. Trump appointed Musk to lead the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, which was tasked with cutting federal government spending, but fell far short of Musk’s $1 trillion goal. 

Musk quickly became a member of Mr. Trump’s inner circle, participating in Cabinet meetings and traveling on Air Force One with his young son. Less than a month into his government service, Musk professed on X: “I love @realDonaldTrump as much as a straight man can love another man.” 

DOGE quickly gained vast influence within the Trump administration, slashing government staff and nearly dismantling some federal agencies

Musk and Mr. Trump appeared together in the Oval Office in February — with Musk’s son in tow — and jointly answered questions from the press.

President Trump listens as Elon Musk, joined by his son X Æ A-Xii, speaks in the Oval Office on Feb. 11.

Alex Brandon / AP


Mr. Trump stood by Musk as some of his efforts drew backlash. In late February, a DOGE-backed email telling federal employees to report what they had accomplished in the preceding week sparked confusion in some agencies. During a Cabinet meeting days later, Mr. Trump called Musk “tremendously successful” and said people were “thrilled” with his performance — and said federal workers who haven’t responded to the emails are “on the bubble.”

When Tesla faced protests from Trump opponents, the president boosted Musk, climbing into a Tesla on the White House South Lawn in March and calling the car “beautiful.” Days prior, Mr. Trump said on Truth Social he would “buy a brand new Tesla” as a show of support for Musk, who the president said was “doing a FANTASTIC JOB.”

President Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk speak to reporters as they sit in a red Model S Tesla vehicle on the South Lawn of the White House on March 11.

/ AP


Musk clashed with White House trade adviser Peter Navarro in April over Mr. Trump’s tariff strategy. Musk called Navarro “dumber than a sack of bricks” after Navarro said Tesla relies on “cheap foreign parts.” Mr. Trump’s White House didn’t take sides: “Boys will be boys,” Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said.

In a late April Cabinet meeting, Mr. Trump praised and thanked Musk — but suggested his time in government could end soon. 

“You’re invited to stay as long as you want. At some point, he wants to get back home to his cars,” Mr. Trump said, as he and his Cabinet led a round of applause for the billionaire.

Musk leaves administration and ramps up criticism 

Days before wrapping up his work for the federal government, Musk began criticizing a massive piece of legislation aimed at advancing Mr. Trump’s second-term agenda. Musk told “CBS News Sunday Morning” he was “disappointed” in the price tag of the package, which would extend Mr. Trump’s signature 2017 tax cuts, boost border security spending, impose work requirements on Medicaid recipients and roll back clean energy tax credits.

Musk left his position in the administration on May 30 after reaching the maximum number of days he could serve as a special government employee. Musk, who had a black eye, stood next to Mr. Trump in the Oval Office as the president praised the billionaire’s government work and called him “one of the greatest business leaders and innovators the world has ever produced.” 

“Elon’s really not leaving. He’s going to be back and forth, I think, I have a feeling,” Mr. Trump said. Musk said he would continue to serve as a “friend and adviser” to the president.

President Trump presents a key to Elon Musk during a news conference in the Oval Office of the White House on May 30.

Evan Vucci / AP


Musk-Trump spat bursts wide open

In the following days, Musk escalated his criticism of the legislation Mr. Trump has dubbed a “big, beautiful bill,” calling it a “disgusting abomination” in a lengthy early June tirade on his social media platform. The insults continued through the week, reaching a climax on June 5 with Mr. Trump threatening to cancel Musk’s lucrative government contracts and Musk claiming that Mr. Trump could not have won the presidency without him. 

Musk said he would shut down a SpaceX program that NASA relies on to transport astronauts — before later backtracking — and seemed to endorse an X post calling for Mr. Trump to be impeached. Musk also warned Republican lawmakers: “Trump has 3.5 years left as President, but I will be around for 40+ years.”

During the back-and-forth, Mr. Trump claimed that he asked Musk to leave his administration and upset him with a provision in the budget bill that would end tax credits for electric vehicles.

“Elon was ‘wearing thin,’ I asked him to leave, I took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY!” the president wrote.

Musk then alleged that Mr. Trump’s name appeared in the files related to the case of Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who died by suicide in federal custody in 2019 while facing charges of sex trafficking.

“@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public,” Musk wrote. “Have a nice day, DJT!” 

In response to the spat, Leavitt called it an “unfortunate episode from Elon.”

A red Tesla is parked on West Executive Drive on the White House campus on June 5, 2025 — the same day as Elon Musk and President Trump’s public feud.

Alex Brandon / AP




Source link

Trump says Musk is



Trump says Musk is “not really leaving” as DOGE savings lag behind projections – CBS News










































Watch CBS News



After billionaire Elon Musk helped to cut jobs across 25 federal agencies, there was one last position to eliminate: his own. But President Trump said Musk will return to to help after his last official day. Weijia Jiang reports.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


Source link

Fired climate scientist says DOGE



Fired climate scientist says DOGE “a stain” as Elon Musk exits government – CBS News










































Watch CBS News



Elon Musk’s 130-day run as top budget and job-cutting adviser to the president is coming to an end, according to the White House. That work included targeting the jobs of more than 100,000 federal workers — and saving the government much less than was originally projected. Weijia Jiang reports.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


Source link

USDA cuts cripple food banks and school food programs in North Carolina



USDA cuts cripple food banks and school food programs in North Carolina – CBS News










































Watch CBS News



The White House cut two federal programs in March that provide just over $1 billion in annual funding to school districts and food banks nationwide. Janet Shamlian reports on the impact.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


Source link

Elon Musk says he’s “disappointed” by Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” and what it means for DOGE

Elon Musk says he is “disappointed” by the price tag on the domestic policy bill passed by Republicans in the House last week and heavily backed by President Trump, the billionaire who recently stepped back from running the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, told “CBS Sunday Morning” in an exclusive broadcast interview.

“I was disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, not just decreases it, and undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,” Musk said.

Musk’s comments appear to put him at odds with Mr. Trump, who has championed the massive spending package. The legislation — which still needs to pass the Senate — would extend Mr. Trump’s signature 2017 tax cuts, boost border security spending, impose work requirements on Medicaid and roll back clean energy tax credits.

The tax provisions of the package, titled the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” after Mr. Trump’s name for the bill, would increase the deficit by $3.8 trillion by 2034, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

“I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful,” Musk told CBS News, “but I don’t know if it can be both. My personal opinion.”

Musk was a near-constant presence in the early months of the Trump administration, with his DOGE staffers sweeping through virtually every government agency to make widespread cuts — drawing concern from Democrats and even some Trump allies, as well as numerous legal challenges. Musk, who is also the CEO of Tesla, SpaceX and the social media platform X, has said he will dial back his involvement in government.

See more of the interview with Elon Musk on “CBS Sunday Morning” on June 1.

Source link

DOGE cuts to weather balloon sites leave U.S. without crucial data, some meteorologists say

Detroit — When the National Guard has to be called out for an ice storm, as was the case in Northern Michigan at the end of March, the situation is dire.

At the time, meteorologists couldn’t forecast just how much of the region would be encased in ice.

“While it [the forecast] showed devastating ice, it ended up still being worse than expected,” said Ahmad Bajjey, CBS News Detroit’s chief meteorologist. 

Up to 1.5 inches of ice accumulated across large portions of Northern Michigan, knocking down power lines, blocking roads, and damaging homes and businesses. Last month, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer requested federal disaster aid.

Bajjey said he was working without National Weather Service data he usually counts on.

“We couldn’t get true real-world data as often as needed,” Bajjey said.

At least 13 of nearly 100 balloon sites were cut or reduced when the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, took aim at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration earlier this year. 

Two of them, one in Michigan and another in Wisconsin, left gaps in data. 

Those gaps could have helped during the March ice storm, as well as last week, when dangerous thunderstorms and tornadoes hit Wisconsin, meteorologists say. 

There have also been cuts in places like the Rocky Mountains in the western U.S. and “Tornado Alley” in the central U.S., where storms get started and move east. One balloon site was also eliminated in the Florida Panhandle just days before the start of the Atlantic hurricane season. 

For the past 100 years of U.S. weather forecasting, there’s no better substitute to weather balloons, meteorologists say.
 
Associate professor of meteorology Dr. John Allen teaches future meteorologists at Central Michigan University. He also studies how artificial intelligence can improve forecasts.
 
But he says the data received from weather balloons is irreplaceable. He showed CBS News a device used to communicate with a weather balloon. 

“So what this device is doing is reporting back every couple of seconds as we look through the whole column of the atmosphere,” Allen said.

His research in AI cannot make up for a lack of air pressure and moisture data collected by balloons.

“If we have clouds, satellites really don’t tell us much about what’s actually happening,” he said, explaining why weather balloons are essential and their data cannot be duplicated by satellites or radar.  

Dr. John Allen, right, associate professor of meteorology at Central Michigan University, teaching students how to use and collect data from a weather balloon. May 2025. 

CBS News


In a statement to CBS on News Friday, a NOAA spokesperson defended NWS forecasting. 

“The National Weather Service is committed to delivering accurate, timely, and life-saving forecasts despite speculation,” the spokesperson said. “Through strategic transformation, staff reallocation, and updated service standards, NWS is ensuring resilience and continuity of mission-critical functions. Reports suggesting otherwise are false and disrespectful to the many weather scientists who work tirelessly to produce the best weather data in the world.”

In the meantime, some meteorologists like Bajjey say they have no choice but to make do with new limitations.

“This is about public safety,” Bajjey said. “It’s every single forecast, every warning, every alert, and every update. And this is where it comes from.”

In an open letter published earlier this month, five living former NWS leaders issued a warning about the impact of staffing and program cuts to the NOAA.

“Our worst nightmare is that weather forecast offices will be so understaffed that there will be needless loss of life,” the letter said. “We know that’s a nightmare shared by those on the forecasting front lines – and by the people who depend on their efforts.” 

Source link

Florida food banks feel the sting of DOGE cuts

Miami — Before sunrise on a recent May day, workers at the Miami-area food bank Feeding South Florida move, load and stack pallets of food and household goods onto trucks.

With the help of volunteers, this flurry of activity has allowed the organization to distribute food to 1.2 million people throughout four Florida counties. 

The food goes to people like Rosalyn Budgett, who lives on a fixed income and comes to Feeding South Florida every two months.
 
“I’m able to get a balanced meal on a daily basis,” Budgett told CBS News. 

She says that without the food bank, “I’d probably starve.”
 
But the aid she relies on has been reduced. In March, the White House’s Department of Government Efficiency cut funding for about $1 billion worth of U.S. Department of Agriculture programs. The two federal programs that were cut allowed schools and food banks to purchase food directly from local farmers and producers.

“We’ve been seeing empty racks since February,” Paco Velez, CEO of Feeding South Florida, told CBS News. “These cuts have really made an impact, not just on our ability to serve, but on the families’ ability to thrive in South Florida and across the country.” 

For Feeding South Florida, the cuts amount to 40% of its $37 million annual budget.

“It’s an unfortunate situation, because we see that our families are desperate,” Velez said. “They’re coming in more frequently than they ever have. And we’re trying to maintain as much food as we can. But there is a little desperation.”

The line of cars for weekly food distribution at Ebenezer Church in South Miami has only gotten longer over the years.

Pastor Roberto Blanco, who gets part of the supply from Feeding South Florida’s warehouse, is working with less. 

The situation is affecting farmers too. East Coast Farm and Vegetables near Parkland, Florida, partnered with Feeding South Florida to use federal dollars to pick and pack surplus produce destined for families in need.

“This program…is a great use of our tax dollars,” said Katelyn Garcia, vice president of East Coast Farm and Vegetables. “We are not only helping our farmers…here in the States, but you’re also feeding families.”

Without the funds to process the produce, farmers are hoping crops won’t go to waste.
 
Says Garcia: “We know that the end goal is to feed people and we need to work towards that goal.”

contributed to this report.

Source link

Elon Musk says he intends to remain Tesla CEO for years to come

Why are Trump, Musk in Saudi Arabia?



Why are Trump, Elon Musk and Sam Altman in Saudi Arabia?

04:53

Billionaire Elon Musk said Tuesday he’s committed to being CEO of Tesla in five years’ time as the automaker faced intense consumer and stockprice pressure over his work with President Donald Trump’s government.

The question came as Musk made a video appearance at the Qatar Economic Forum hosted by Bloomberg after Musk recently traveled to Doha as part of Mr. Trump’s Mideast trip last week.

A moderator asked: “Do you see yourself and are you committed to still being the chief executive of Tesla in five years’ time?”

Musk responded: “Yes.”

The moderator pushed further: “No doubt about that at all?”

Musk added, chuckling: “I can’t be still here if I’m dead.”

Tesla has faced intense pressure as Musk worked with Mr. Trump as part of its self-described Department of Government Efficiency effort, or DOGE, particularly amid its campaign of staff cuts across the U.S. federal government.

The interview with Musk comes three weeks after a report in the Wall Street Journal on May 1 said that Tesla board members had reached out to several hiring firms about finding a new Tesla CEO. 

Calling the report “absolutely false,” Tesla Chair Robyn Denholm on May 1 said the electric vehicle maker’s board has not contacted recruitment firms to start a search for a new CEO to replace Elon Musk. 

Source link

In chaos of mass DOGE firings, a grieving husband fights to save consumer agency

Eva Steege may have seemed like an unlikely combattant in the pushback against mass firings by the Trump administration. The 83-year-old retired Lutheran pastor was in hospice, unable to walk, when she was asked to join a group seeking to block the administration’s gutting of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 

“It took us about five minutes to decide that that was a good thing to do,” her husband Ted Steege, 82, told CBS News in an interview. 

When Eva died in March, Ted took her place in the lawsuit which, to this point, has prevented the agency’s dismantling and yielded hundreds of pages of internal communications shedding new light on DOGE’s effort to slash the federal workforce. Steege has become one face of the human toll wrought by the chaos and scope of the mass federal firings that marked the Trump administration’s first 100 days in Washington.

“We saw an opportunity, not just to gain something that we were entitled to, but also to do something that will change lives for lots of dedicated workers and for people all around the country who have suffered injustices, quiet things that nobody ever notices,” Ted Steege said.  

The injustice the couple faced originated with Eva’s decision in her 60s to fulfill a lifelong dream of becoming a pastor. To afford her seminary school tuition, Steege said the couple sold their house and took on $43,000 in debt. 

For years, they dutifully paid down the debt but, as of January, still believed they owed about $17,000. On the advice of Lutheran Social Services, the couple approached the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for help enrolling in a federal loan forgiveness program. 

Established by Congress in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the bureau, known as the CFPB, is tasked with protecting consumers from financial fraud and shady lending practices. Workers reviewing the Steeges’ case discovered the Steeges didn’t need loan forgiveness at all — that in fact they had overpaid and were owed them more than $15,000 in refunds.

Filled with hope, the couple planned on meeting with CFPB staffers on Feb. 10. That morning the Trump administration issued a stop work order effectively shutting down the agency. 

“An email came that said, sorry we have different directives,” Steege said. “We can’t meet with you.”

Ted Steege

CBS News


A grieving husband joins the court battle over DOGE firings

Now, he’s fighting to restore the bureau’s functions by staving off the mass firing of its employees. The battle is playing out in federal court, where earlier this month appellate judges issued a ruling to temporarily block the Trump administration’s latest effort to slash the workforce. 

The ruling came after a flurry of filings in the case made public a trove of emails, internal chats and sworn employee declarations. The documents revealed a frantic push in April by agency leadership and DOGE officials to fire nearly 1,500 employees — about 90% of the CFPB’s staff.

Helping to carry out the mass dismissals was a 25-year-old DOGE official named Gavin Kliger, who has helped implement cuts across at least half a dozen federal agencies. Kliger has no federal government experience prior to working for DOGE.

CBS News reached Kliger by phone, but he declined to offer comments or answer questions. In a statement, a White House spokesperson disputed the idea that Kliger “managed” the firings at CFPB, but did not clarify his role. In an internal chat made public in the court filings, messages show Kliger claiming he would “be running this operation.” 

According to sworn testimony from a CFPB employee, Kliger allegedly demanded staffers prepare firing notices for 36 hours straight, “screaming at people he did not believe were working fast enough, calling them incompetent.” 

The White House spokesperson said the allegations against Kliger were “another attempt to diminish DOGE’s critical mission to [make] government more effective and efficient.”

Former director disputes claim of “vast waste”

Before they were put on hold by the court, the CFPB’s Trump-appointed chief legal officer defended the firings, saying they were necessary to “better align with Administration police, and right-size Bureau” and claimed “leadership discovered vast waste”. 

The CFPB did not respond to a request for comment about the Steeges’ case or the ongoing efforts by agency leadership to reduce its workforce. 

In an interview with CBS News, former CFPB Director Rohit Chopra called that finding of waste “completely made up.” He said the bureau will cease to function if the administration’s cuts are allowed to proceed. 

“This is a ‘defund the police’ approach to looking after Wall Street and the financial industry,” said Chopra, who was fired by the White House in February despite President Trump having appointed him to a role on the Federal Trade Commission during his first term. 

Chopra said extending help to borrowers like Ted and Eva Steege who are looking to mount challenges against predatory lenders is core to the agency’s mission. 

“Every day, thousands of people come to the CFPB for help like this, and all of that looks like it’s getting shut down,” he said.  

As the courts wrestle over the administration’s actions, Ted Steege is continuing to pursue Eva’s reimbursement claim, hoping the agency will survive long enough to help deliver the money she was owed.

“She definitely wanted to have that refund money to be part of our estate and make things better for our children and grandchildren,” he said. 

Source link