Musk leaves Trump govt, caps chaotic tenure
- Balitang Marino

- May 30, 2025
- 3 min read

WASHINGTON, D.C., May 30 ------ Elon Musk is leaving United States President Donald Trump's administration after leading a tumultuous efficiency drive, during which he upended several federal agencies but ultimately failed to deliver the generational savings he had sought.
His "offboarding will begin tonight," a White House official told Reuters on Wednesday night, confirming Musk's departure from government. Earlier, Tesla's billionaire founder took to his social media platform X to thank Trump, as his time as a special government employee with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) draws to an end. His departure was quick and unceremonious. He did not have a formal conversation with Trump before announcing his exit, said a source with knowledge of the matter, adding that his departure was decided "at a senior staff level." While the precise circumstances of his exit were not immediately clear, he leaves a day after criticizing Trump's marquee tax bill, calling it too expensive and a measure that would undermine his work with the US DOGE Service.
Some senior White House officials, including Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, were particularly irked by those comments, and the White House was forced to call Republican senators to reiterate Trump's support for the package, a source familiar with the matter said. While Musk remains close to the president, his exit comes after a gradual, but steady slide in standing.
Powerful force
After Trump's inauguration, the billionaire quickly emerged as a powerful force in Trump's orbit: hyper visible, unapologetically brash and unfettered by traditional norms. At the Conservative Political Action Conference in February, he brandished a red metallic chainsaw to wild cheers. "This is the chainsaw for bureaucracy," he declared.
On the campaign trail, Musk had said DOGE would be able to cut at least $2 trillion in federal spending. The department currently estimates its efforts have saved $175 billion so far, a number Reuters was not able to independently verify. Musk did not hide his animus for the federal workforce, and he predicted that revoking "the Covid-era privilege" of telework would trigger "a wave of voluntary terminations that we welcome." But some Cabinet members who initially embraced Musk's outsider energy grew wary of his tactics, sources said. Over time, they grew more confident pushing back against his job cuts, encouraged by Trump's reminder in early March that staffing decisions rested with department secretaries, not with Musk.
Musk clashed with three of Trump's most senior Cabinet members: Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. He called Trump's trade adviser Peter Navarro a "moron" and "dumber than a sack of bricks." Navarro dismissed the insults, saying, "I've been called worse." At the same time, Musk began to hint that his time in government would come to a close, while expressing frustration at times that he could not more aggressively cut spending. In an April 22 Tesla conference call, he signaled he would be significantly scaling back his government work to focus on his businesses. "The federal bureaucracy situation is much worse than I realized," Musk told The Washington Post this week. "I thought there were problems, but it sure is an uphill battle trying to improve things in D.C., to say the least."
DOGE goes on
Musk's 130-day mandate as a special government employee in the Trump administration was set to expire around May 30. The administration has said DOGE's efforts to restructure and shrink the federal government will continue. Several Cabinet secretaries are already discussing with the White House how to proceed without further alienating congressional Republicans. But even as department heads will keep some DOGE infrastructure in place, they would probably move to reassert control over budgets and staffing, sources have told Reuters.
Trump and DOGE have managed to cut nearly 12 percent, or 260,000, of the 2.3 million-strong federal civilian workforce largely through threats of firings, buyouts and early retirement offers, a Reuters review of agency departures found. At the same time, DOGE has hit a number of roadblocks, with federal courts at times propping back up agencies shortly after the agency had moved to eliminate them. In some cases, staff and funding cuts have led to purchasing bottlenecks, increased costs and a brain drain of scientific and technological talent.
Source: manilatimes.net





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