Judges to consider barring Musk’s Doge team from government systems

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FILE PHOTO: Elon Musk listens to U.S. President Donald Trump speak in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 11, 2025.   REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

The Department of Government Efficiency under Mr Elon Musk (left) has swept through federal agencies since Republican Donald Trump became President in January.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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NEW YORK - Two federal judges will consider on Feb 14 whether Mr Elon Musk’s government cost-cutting team known as Doge will have access to Treasury Department payment systems and potentially sensitive data at US health, consumer protection and labour agencies.

The Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency has swept through federal agencies since Republican Donald Trump became President in January and put the chief executive of carmaker Tesla in charge of rooting out wasteful spending as part of Mr Trump’s dramatic overhaul of government.

In Manhattan, US District Judge Paul Engelmayer will consider a request by Democratic state attorneys-general to extend a temporary block on Doge that he put in place on Feb 8, which prevented Mr Musk’s team from accessing Treasury systems responsible for trillions of dollars of payments.

The states allege that Mr Musk’s team has no legal power to access the payment systems that contain sensitive personal information on millions of Americans.

The lawsuit also argued that Mr Musk and his team could disrupt federal funding for health clinics, pre-schools, climate initiatives and other programmes, and that Mr Trump could use the information to further his political agenda.

In Washington, US District Judge John Bates will consider a request by unions to prevent the Doge team from accessing sensitive records at the Department of Health and Human Services, the Labour Department and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Mr Bates denied a similar request last week, delivering a ruling in the Trump administration's favour. The unions have renewed that request after they amended their lawsuit.

A similar group of Democratic attorneys-general sued Mr Musk, Mr Trump and Doge on Feb 13, alleging that Mr Musk's appointment was unconstitutional.

The attorneys-general asked a federal judge in Washington to bar him from accessing and using government data, cancelling contracts or making personnel decisions, among other things. 

Most of Mr Trump's initiatives that have been legally challenged have been blocked by the courts, which has prompted Mr Musk and other Trump allies to call for judges to be impeached, although the president said he would obey court orders.

Despite some initiatives being blocked in court, Mr Trump’s administration has pushed ahead with 

mass firings of government workers

and has

sharply curtailed the United States’ foreign aid programme

, although the cost-cutting appears to be focused on programmes opposed by political conservatives. REUTERS

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