Elon Musk will not completely come out of the so-called department of government efficiency-and its activities are only intense. On Friday, President Donald Trump threw cold water on the idea that Kasturi would completely disappear from Dog and White House forever. “Elon is not really leaving,” Trump said at a joint press conference with Kasturi at the Oval Office. “He is going to be ahead. This is his child, he is going to do a lot of things.”
“I hope to continue to provide advice,” Kasturi, wearing a black hat with Dogi written on it and reading a black shirt, said during the Friday press conference, while seeing that his legal limit for service as a special government employee was ending. “I hope to remain a friend and a consultant.”
Federal workers of at least six agencies said that the work of Dogi-style is increasing in their departments.
According to sources, both new and acquaintances have also been detailed for new agencies recently. Members of Musk’s initial Dogge team including Luke Pharmate, Gavin Cligger, Edward Coristine and Sam Korcos have met with several departments and agencies – including Treasury, management and budget offices and FBI in recent times, which continue normally, continue, continue normally, wire has learned.
According to the documents viewed by Wired, the team also appears actively recruiting.
In the last week, federal employees have also been asked to review immediately and cancel the contracts in the government. Trump confirmed that the contracts were being reviewed at Friday’s press conference: “Many contracts, alone, are now seen,” he said.
Some agencies have also received trips from Dogi at their headquarters, Wired has learned.
An IT expert from the Department of Agriculture (USDA) tell Wired, “It is not like a group that is going away, it seems that it seems to be digging like a parasite.”
Since Dogge first started his work in Washington in late January, its representatives were eager to cut whatever they see as a spectacular expenses in the government. In recent weeks, the pressure to slash and cancel the contracts, especially focused on the workforce management and IT, has greatly increased, explaining many sources of different types of agencies.
“The biggest thing is that we are being asked to cut more and more contracts for software and labor,” a technical worker of the Interior Department (DOI) told Wired, stating that stating that the target, as they understand it, has been “to save money and efficiency”. ,
“We are cutting developers, telecom, server admins, call center staff, etc.,” called DOI source. “Some things were broken and can use the cut. Others are going to suffer, and our service is being degraded to the public.”
Employees of all agencies under the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and its umbrella were told that the contracts would have to undergo a new approval process called Departmental Efficiency Review (DER). According to an email about the procedure obtained by WIRED, any requirement or contract approval is stopped until after submitting a form and a form to review the office of the Deputy Secretary to start Der. The email also states that the review will flag down any contract that seems expensive and highly.