Washington, D.C. – A quiet but significant standoff unfolded on February 1 at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) headquarters when a team dispatched by Elon Musk, now leading a controversial government restructuring effort, was denied access to sensitive areas of the building.
The team, operating under the banner of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), had already spent several days at USAID, scrutinizing operations and questioning staff. However, when they attempted to gain entry into secure areas, agency officials drew a firm line, blocking their access. The confrontation did not escalate into violence, but the implications of Musk’s widening influence over the federal government became immediately apparent.
USAID, a 64-year-old agency responsible for distributing $35 billion annually to combat famine, disease, and humanitarian crises worldwide, has now effectively ceased operations following Musk’s intervention. Within days, the vast majority of its staff were placed on leave, and international offices shuttered.
Musk, acting with sweeping authority granted by President Donald Trump, has been leading an aggressive campaign to overhaul the federal government, slashing budgets and dismantling agencies deemed inefficient. He has shown little tolerance for opposition. Shortly after the USAID incident, he took to his social media platform, X, to label the agency “a criminal organization” and declare “Time for it to die.”
DOGE’s presence extends far beyond USAID. The group has established footholds in key departments, including the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and the U.S. Digital Service (USDS), gaining access to personnel records and government technology infrastructure. The Education Department and other agencies reportedly fear sweeping job cuts similar to those Musk implemented when he took over Twitter, where he laid off 80% of the workforce in a matter of weeks.
Concerns over DOGE’s unchecked power have sparked internal resistance. A Treasury Department official who refused DOGE’s request for access to the federal payment system was forced into early retirement. The new Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, later granted DOGE the access it sought, though the administration partially rolled back that decision following legal challenges.
Meanwhile, federal employees are bracing for drastic reductions. On January 28, millions of workers received an email offering them eight months’ severance pay if they resigned voluntarily. The subject line, “Fork in the Road,” was identical to the one Musk used in 2022 when downsizing Twitter. At the Office of Personnel Management, staff reportedly expect 70% of jobs to be cut, severely affecting health care benefits and retirement services for government employees.
The radical restructuring follows plans outlined in Project 2025, a conservative policy blueprint crafted by former Trump officials, which aims to replace career civil servants with loyal political appointees. Though Trump distanced himself from the document on the campaign trail, its implementation under Musk’s leadership has closely followed its recommendations.
Supporters of Musk’s mission argue that bloated bureaucracy has long needed reform. Robert Doar, president of the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said, “The federal government is so big that there are surely significant opportunities for savings and efficiency.” However, critics warn that Musk’s unchecked power over public institutions could have devastating consequences, both domestically and internationally.
With USAID sidelined, millions of people worldwide who rely on American aid for food, medicine, and shelter are now without support. Farmers in the Midwest, who previously benefitted from USAID-backed grain purchases for humanitarian relief, may see markets disappear. American companies exporting to China may find themselves without government assistance in navigating trade laws.
As DOGE expands its reach, federal workers are left in a state of uncertainty. One Department of Homeland Security employee described colleagues adopting a “defensive crouch” as they await a visit from Musk’s team. Many have turned to “Character Limit,” a book chronicling Musk’s Twitter takeover, for clues about their likely fate.
For now, Musk remains answerable to no one but the President. Whether the American public will embrace or resist his radical transformation of government remains to be seen.
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