Fresh Air - How Did Elon Musk Become So Powerful In The Trump Administration?
Episode Date: February 12, 2025New York Times journalist Eric Lipton explains how Musk's companies are benefiting as he cuts federal jobs and agencies, and reporter Teddy Schleifer explains how Musk's political views turned right, ...and why he thinks the billionaire's relationship with Trump might actually last.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Terry Gross.
A new investigation into conflicts of interest posed by Elon Musk overseeing the drastic cost-cutting and dismantling of some federal agencies was published yesterday afternoon in the New York Times online.
A few hours later, Musk and President Trump held a joint press conference during which they insisted Musk was operating with full transparency.
Trump said he wouldn't allow Musk to look into areas that posed a conflict of interest.
Musk controls six private companies, including SpaceX, Tesla, and X, formerly Twitter.
He gets billions of dollars from the federal government.
My guest, Eric Lipton, along with Times reporter Kirsten Grind, spent the past year investigating Musk's business with the
federal government. They learned that at least 11 federal agencies have more than
32 continuing investigations, pending complaints, or enforcement actions into
Musk's companies. Yesterday, before the Trump-Musk press conference, I spoke to Lipton about
what the investigation uncovered. Eric Lipton, welcome to Fresh Air. You're a
reporter looking into these conflicts of interest. Is there anyone in an official
capacity in the Trump administration or in Congress or in any other official
capacity who is doing an investigation into possible conflicts of interest
between Elon Musk and the departments and agencies that he is cutting jobs and costs.
Matthew Feeney That's the somewhat startling thing to me as a reporter at this moment is
that there's really no one else beyond us, the team that's working on it from the New
York Times and other journalists because just in the last few days Trump fired the head of the Office of Government Ethics.
He's removed the inspectors general across the government, at least 17 of them. The Congress is controlled by Republicans,
so therefore the Democrats who might be more critical of him don't have subpoena power and they don't really therefore have significant
investigative powers and the Department of Justice is controlled by someone who's completely loyal to Trump.
So there really is not much of a investigative capacity or an investigative desire beyond
reporters that are attempting to drill into this without subpoena power.
Danielle Pletka And the Office of Government Ethics, which
you mentioned, Trump just fired the head of it this week. That office had pending requests to investigate Musk for conflicts of interest.
On what grounds?
That's right.
I mean, really, there's never been anything quite like Elon Musk.
This is a guy whose companies just last year in 2024 received $3.8 billion worth of federal
government contracts.
And in the last five years, $13 dollars worth of federal government contracts and in the last five years 13 billion dollars worth of contracts
He has investigations pending of his various corporate entities in the dozens
And it's just sort of an acronym soup of federal agencies that either have pending investigations lawsuits
subpoenaing him all kinds of things that are active and that are in play and
all kinds of things that are active and that are in play and therefore vulnerable to being shut down.
Not only therefore does he have billions of dollars at stake financially, but he has, you know, dozens of investigations targeting him at the same time as he has this immense power reaching across,
you know, really the whole breadth of the federal government. There really has never been a conflict
so broad in probably in American history.
So he is investigating spending and possible fraud
in agencies and departments throughout the government.
Is anybody investigating if there's
any inefficiency or fraud in the about $3 billion
he's getting from the government?
Well, I mean, again, the president Trump just neutered all 17 of the inspectors general
who really had the greatest capacity to investigate potential waste, fraud, and abuse in his contracts.
And we know that multiple IGs had pending investigations, including the Department of Defense,
which was examining whether or not he had violated the terms of having a top secret security clearance because he wasn't properly reporting
engagements he had with foreign government figures.
As far as we understand, there are still questions being asked relative to that inquiry, but
the individual who oversees that office has been replaced, and therefore it could be a
dead end even if staff is still working on it. So the short answer is it's unlikely that he will be the subject of very close scrutiny,
just like it's unlike President Trump will be the subject of close scrutiny because there
really is no one left outside of journalists to be asking hard questions.
Danielle Pletka The National Labor Relations Board has 24 investigations
into Musk's companies. Can you tell us a little bit about the nature
of some of those investigations?
Well, for example, during the takeover of Twitter and its transformation into X, there
were employees who felt that they were being improperly treated, they were dismissed, they
were being subject to internal investigations, and they felt as if they had
been unfairly treated, then they filed complaints with the National Labor Relations Board.
But what Trump then did in the last few weeks was to eliminate the quorum at the National
Labor Relations Board by firing several of the commissioners.
And so therefore, the commission can no longer act on recommendations from the staff to file
a lawsuit against the target of any investigation or to agree to a settlement if there were
to be a settlement proposed.
So he's effectively frozen the National Labor Relations Board by removing the majority of
its board.
Danielle Pletka And it's interesting because it sounds like some of the investigations
into Musk's companies
from the National Labor Relations Board are similar
to the kinds of
suits that Musk may face
because of the way he's eliminating positions
in federal agencies.
Yeah, Musk is taking a very similar approach to that
which he took at Twitter and applying
it to the federal government, which is to slash it radically and rapidly without much
consideration for the consequences, both for the services that it provides and for the
people that work there.
The Democrats in Congress can write letters asking for reviews and they can have protests
and press conferences.
But that's about the limit of their power as well.
They don't have subpoena power, and they cannot have bipartisan investigations into really
anything at this point.
Danielle Pletka What about the courts?
Michael O'Brien I mean, the courts, as we've seen, are
really the one place.
And the state attorneys general, the Democrats, have filed litigation, and there are various
nonprofit groups and employee groups and labor unions Democrats have filed litigation and there are various nonprofit
groups and employee groups and labor unions that have filed litigation.
And that has actually made a significant difference so far.
I think to some extent, the strategy on the part of the Trump administration is just to
blow through those district court rulings to continue to operate the way that they are,
to sometimes even potentially ignore the court orders and just wait for it to get the Court of Appeals and then the Supreme Court to try to prove
their argument, which is that the executive power is supreme and that they can largely
do what they want.
You know, Trump and Musk both have a history of basically doing what they want and despite
inquiries or at times even, you know, court orders. Let's look at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was founded by Senator, Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren.
It received hundreds of complaints about Tesla revolving around
debt collection or loan problems. Tell us a little bit about the complaints.
I mean, they're mostly small bore things that, you know, people who bought cars were
having disputes with the company over loans or the terms of financing or the cars being
were being repossessed because of potentially, you know, unpaid debts.
You know, that's not that unusual to have for a big company to have complaints like
that.
You can just go do a query on the CFPB's website if it still is up when you do the query.
But there are hundreds of them.
And the more significant thing for Elon Musk is his company X is planning on going into
financial services and potentially offering banking-like services.
And then the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau would have direct jurisdiction over
his company's operations if they go into financial services.
And I think that he doesn't want to have those kinds of questions asked.
He basically shut down the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
He called for, he said the CFPB rest, you know, RIP in a, now whether or not he actually
shut it down, he clearly supported it.
He was mocking it and, you know, said RIP, rest in peace for the agency. Now,
I can't tell you that he's the one that decided or that he's the one that executed on that
shutdown, but he clearly supported it and played a role.
Let's look at the Federal Aviation Agency, which has fined SpaceX for safety violations.
Tell the story about the launch of the satellite, the SpaceX satellite. In the fall of 2023, there was a launch of a 10-ton satellite into geosynchronous orbit,
which is like 22,000 miles out there.
And it's the largest satellite ever launched in terms of its mass to that orbit.
And it's a pretty big deal. It's there for a satellite communications company.
And that launch went off without really much public notice.
Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy are launching so frequently now,
we don't even almost pay attention to them.
But what was happening behind the scenes
was that even before that, as the countdown was underway,
the FAA concluded that SpaceX did not
have proper authorization for a new fueling system
that they had built there at the space launch
facility in Florida.
And they were challenging the continuation of the launch, but the launch went ahead anyway.
And so after it was over, the FAA said that was a safety violation and we're going to
fine you hundreds of thousands of dollars.
And Elon Musk was very angry at that.
He was like, what do you think you're doing?
You're interfering in our operations.
There was no safety threat. And the FAA is getting in our way.
And he called for the firing of the FAA administrator and he said I'm gonna sue
the FAA. He really went, and then he went so far as to say, you know, they're
preventing our efforts to to get humans to Mars and, you know, our grand ambitions. 283,009 dollars, like just a few dollars more than 283,000 dollars is probably a pittance
to Elon Musk.
So why is this such an offense to him?
It's trivial.
I think the biggest thing that really frustrates him about the FAA is the amount of time it
takes to get clearances to do new
launches, particularly for the Starship, which is his newest rocket, the largest
rocket that humans have ever built, and he is extremely frustrated at how long
it takes to get clearance to do additional test flights of the Starship.
And he wants the FAA to get out of the way. He thinks that the FAA is slowing
his effort to get, you know, humans to Mars. And I way. He thinks that the FAA is slowing his effort to get humans to Mars.
And I mean, I think that that find is really trivial and that that's just a kind of a small
piddling thing that is a symptom of his bigger annoyance with the agency and also with the
Department of Interior, which is looking at the environmental harm that the launches are
causing in South Texas and the destruction of the
habitat of threatened bird species, for example, which I've witnessed myself personally. I was out
there for a launch and then walked the grounds with a wildlife biologist from the Fish and Wildlife
and we saw the destroyed nest eggs from the blast of the Starship, which basically threw gravel across
a state park towards federal wildlife refuge.
So that damage is occurring, and the fact that people are even looking at that and questioning
it really frustrates Elon Musk.
Danielle Pletka So the SEC, the Securities and Exchange Commission, has been investigating what Musk paid for
Twitter and the backstory to that.
So would you explain that?
Yeah.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether or not Musk failed to
honor a requirement to disclose at the moment that he obtained 5% of Twitter, he needed
to make a public filing.
And the reason you do that is that you need to share with other investors
if you are a significant owner of any particular corporation,
and that's relevant material information about the company.
But instead of notifying the SEC and making that public disclosure,
he continued to buy thousands and thousands of additional shares.
And so effectively, he was able to buy those shares at a significantly discounted price,
saving approximately $150 million as he accumulated shares of Twitter before he ultimately took
over the whole company.
So they filed a lawsuit saying you failed to honor the federal law that requires you
to disclose once you exceed 5%.
And Musk and his lawyers were like, this is a technicality.
You're just being annoying.
This is being done for political purposes to try to punish us when this is a minor violation
that you shouldn't even be going after us about.
And now the two of the members of the SEC that voted to go ahead with that litigation
are now gone.
Now, in this case
It was not an action by Trump
This was Gary Gensler the chairman who was a Democrat who resigned and a second Democrat who for personal reasons left the agency
but the net result is that the
Republicans now have a majority on the SEC and so the likely outcome is that this will be settled at a very modest
Penalty or maybe even withdrawn as litigation.
So what were the consequences of Musk having purchased 5% of Twitter stock before saying
that he was going to buy it?
Other investors would have likely bought Twitter stock at that point.
That would have been a sign that Musk had the intention of potentially buying the company
out.
If you're going to accumulate that much stock, then that would have led other people to buy
in thinking, oh, well, I better buy it now because Musk're going to accumulate that much stock, then that would have led other people to buy in thinking, oh well I better buy it now
because Musk is going to be willing to pay a higher price to take the whole
thing over. And so he saved 150 million dollars by getting the stock at a
cheaper price during the period between when he should have filed the
disclosure and when he actually did. Was it hard to report this story and get the
information that you needed?
When I say this story, I mean the whole story you've written about conflicts of
interest. In the fall we spent a month looking at all of Musk's operations with
the federal government, all of his contracts, all the investigations. We had
a database that was built and that allowed us to quickly know what the
pending lawsuits, investigations,
and contracts were. So it was actually didn't take nearly as much time now that we knew where all
the matters were to go back and look and see, okay, several members of the National Labor
Relations Board have been fired and no longer has a quorum, or two members of the SEC have left,
or the chairwoman of the Federal Election Commission has just been fired or the head of the Office of Government Ethics has been
removed and we were able to cross reference all of these actions that Trump has taken and
Look at the investigations that we knew about and see that these have been disrupted
We did not find evidence so far that Musk reached in himself and determined these outcomes
But what we were able to establish is that he has clearly benefited from all of the disruption
that has occurred.
How much do you think Musk's efforts combined
with Trump's desire to basically gut a lot of government,
how much is that reshaping what the federal government is?
I think that this is going to be significant significant depending on whether or not it's not completely
overturned by federal courts.
But I think that this is going to be one of the bigger realignments in modern decades
of the scale and reach of the federal government if they are able to play this out as they
hope.
And I don't, you know, do I really believe that Musk is doing this to try to influence how his companies are treated?
No, I don't I think that he does think that the government has you know, there's too much federal regulatory overreach that there's inefficiencies
And I mean this is a guy who has the reason that he is so massively successful in building SpaceX's he built the most efficient
commercial space company in the history of the space
industry and the cost of getting to orbit has radically reduced because of his efficiencies.
He's a master at the reducing the cost of assembly line operations and building rockets
that get into orbit.
And he's bringing that same approach to the federal government and he's really disrupting
it.
But in the
process of that, the disruption is benefiting his own companies and that is
a conflict of interest. So you know we've been talking about several agencies that
Musk has conflicts of interest with, but if you put all of the departments and
all the agencies together that he is using his team to
cut costs and cut jobs. If you put it all together, what is the significance
that's different than looking at individual places? The thing that is most
striking to me is just that the number of places that he through either contracts
or regulatory investigations that they are looking at him at the same time as he is now
has the power over them.
It's the, you know, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Interior, the Federal
Aviation Administration, the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration, the
employment, you know, EEOC, NLRB, the FEC, the SEC.
I mean, there are so many acronyms, so many places that either regulating him or paying
him at the same time as he has this immense power to help decide what their regulatory
powers and budgets are.
How does one single person do all those things without having a massive conflict of interest?
Danielle Pletka I know you don't cover the courts, but some
of the lawsuits that have been filed to try to stop Musk from following through
on all of the cuts that he's making, some of those are likely to end up before the Supreme
Court.
There are several justices who consider themselves originalists, meaning that they either take
a literal reading of the Constitution or their goal is to try to interpret the Constitution
as closely as the founders would. So one of the basics of the
Constitution is that Congress has powers of the purse, and another is the
separation of powers and the, you know, the equal branches of government,
Congress, judiciary, and executive.
And now the Trump administration seems to be saying, well, we have the power, the courts
can't stop us.
So do you have any idea, like any guesses how the Supreme Court might rule on any of
these appeals?
If you look at the first Trump administration and that went into
Biden, it's really striking the extent of the pendulum swing.
I mean, so many of the regulatory rollbacks that Trump implemented were
then rolled back by Biden.
The thing that really is going to make determine the course of
history is what the courts decide now.
Because if the courts side with Trump and realign the constitutional powers in a way
that Russell Vaught and others in the Trump administration believe, then that really is
going to create, it's not going to be a pendulum swing anymore.
It's going to be a fundamental change in the distribution of power in the United States.
And all of these lawsuits, while they're annoying to the Trump administration and to Elon Musk,
that's where the test is really going to come.
Who knows how the court is going to decide?
It's really sort of hard to predict, but what I can say is that that's the thing that really
is going to determine how consequential all of this is.
Many of these things can be rolled back in whatever the next democratic administration
is, but if the courts decide that the executive branch really has these broad powers to decide
the finances and the operations of federal agencies are, that's huge.
And it will be tested some point in the next four years.
Eric Lipton, I really want to thank you.
Thank you.
Eric Lipton is an investigative reporter at the New York Times.
Our interview was recorded yesterday. Thank you. TARI GROSS There is a lot happening right now in the New York Times. I'm Terry Gross, and this is Fresh Air.
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Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency are reshaping the federal government inserting themselves into departments and agencies
With the goal of drastically slashing costs and cutting jobs.
Musk isn't the only tech billionaire that's a player now in the Trump administration.
My guest, New York Times reporter Theodore Schleifer says,
those tech leaders are emboldened and they have their fingerprints all over the second Trump administration.
What does this say about the influence of Silicon Valley's ultra wealthy on our current government?
The intersection between Silicon Valley and politics is a subject Schleifer has been reporting on for years.
His Times bio describes him as covering billionaires and their impact on the world.
Theodore Schleifer, welcome to Fresh Air.
I'm wondering, has Musk always wanted to have a hand in reshaping government?
No. Elon Musk, a couple years ago, couldn't care less about this stuff. He was like lots
of wealthy tech executives who, you know, probably voted for Democrats. You know, we
know he voted for Obama. He voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016. And over the last couple
of years, as Elon Musk moved to Texas and surrounded himself with a more conservative
social circle and frankly got kind of radicalized by the stuff that he was seeing on
The platform he bought Twitter or now X
he started caring about this but this has all been such a a
Fast burn that your question is a good one because no one really anticipated this happening
burn that your question is a good one because no one really anticipated this happening. But you know like he has tweeted or retweeted conspiracy theories. He's endorsing the far-right
party in Germany. He's aligned with the far-right in the US now. Is there more of an explanation
of how that started happening? Assuming it's something relatively new? I think the timeline starts during COVID. Elon Musk at this time, let's say pre-COVID
in 2019, is somebody who is a center-left Democrat, doesn't really care about politics.
But what happens is Musk begins to feel targeted, fairly or not, by legislators in California.
As you may recall, there were work stoppages put into place
by California government and testless factories
were sort of defying or threatening to defy
California about that.
Around this time in 2021, like lots of wealthy people in tech,
Elon leaves the state.
He moves to Texas.
He moves to Austin.
And he becomes very, very convinced
that COVID and the lockdowns
and what he calls the quote unquote woke mind virus has taken over America. And also around
this time, Elon Musk has a child who begins to identify as trans. And there's a personal
dimension to this that we probably haven't fully appreciated. And suddenly you wake up
four years later
and Elon Musk is the chair of the Department of Government Efficiency and is sort of leading
this takeover of government. But I think the timeline we're talking about here is really
the last four years, it's really the Biden years, which has produced the Elon Musk of
the Trump years.
Danielle Pletka Tell us more about the personal story you
alluded to.
Michael O'Brien Sure. Elon Musk has a lot of kids. Elon has had a lot of marriages or had kids with women who are
not his wife. And one of his children began to identify as trans. And Elon has said publicly
that this issue, trans issues, is really what kind of pushed him away from the Democratic party. And
you know, he's talked a little bit about it publicly. He doesn't always want to go into the personal stuff.
I find in some of his public commentary, he's not eager to talk about this, but we know
that it played some role in kind of him becoming obsessed with these kind of cultural issues,
right?
You know, this is not somebody who, even though he's in charge of a government cost-cutting
initiative, which sounds like, you know, the boring Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney stuff of a decade ago.
When you look at his Twitter feed, his ex-feed, he cares primarily about these sort of issues,
crime, immigration, the woke mind virus that is infecting American kids.
He's motivated, like all of us are, frankly, by our personal experiences.
And clearly, Elon's family life has played a role as well and sort of getting him to be more conservative.
So do you think he sees his trans child as a victim of woke ideology?
I think he's basically said as much.
Yes.
So is Elon Musk a one off or do you think that a lot of the Silicon Valley billionaires have become more conservative,
have drifted more to the right in recent years?
This is just the culmination of everything that came during the Biden era.
When I went to Silicon Valley in 2017, it was impossible to be an outspoken Republican
because you would be allying yourself with Trump.
And even if you were a believer that there should be tougher
border enforcement or that the government spends too much
money or anything that Elon Musk says today,
you would also have to defend all of these positions that
were absolutely reviled in the tech industry.
So most Republicans in tech, frankly, just shut up.
They didn't talk about politics at all.
They talked about their companies.
They were not eager to get involved.
Meanwhile, Silicon Valley liberal billionaires
are sort of the war chest of the resistance,
and they're leading the effort to push back on Trump.
Now fast forward to 2020.
Joe Biden wins.
Trump leaves office.
Jan 6 happens.
Now there is the ability, developing slowly, you know, at the time I'm
there, 2021, 2022, to be anti-Biden. Even if you are not really vocally pro-Trump, you
know, you could argue that we should have a different Republican nominee. You know,
people like Rhonda Santus were getting a lot of currency among Silicon Valley Republican
billionaires. Elon Musk was not that involved at this point,
but plenty of kind of Musk acolytes,
someone like David Sacks,
who is now the White House A.I.s are at the time.
David Sacks helps launch this podcast called All In,
which becomes very popular among the tech right.
And you see anecdotally, you know, I'm there talking with,
you know, kind of people I think of as center-left, kind of rich liberals who areotally, you know, I'm there talking with, you know, kind of people, I think of a center left kind of rich liberals who are beginning to, you know, wonder why is Joe
Biden so anti-business? You know, why didn't he invite Tesla to, you know, an EV summit that he
held at the White House? You sort of see this visceral reaction to kind of the Biden positions
on tech policy. And, you know, why is he stifling innovation, stifling
artificial intelligence? Why is he being so mean to all these crypto industry priorities?
That is kind of the climate that Elon Musk begins to emerge from. Elon in 2023 was supporting Ron
DeSantis somewhat covertly for president. And it wasn't until, you know,
the assassination attempt in mid 2024 that Elon was publicly pro-Trump, but a lot in
building up between 2021 and 2024 that is now we're only seeing publicly in the Trump
White House in 2025. But this was a long time coming, I guess.
So one of the things happening now with Musk, or at least it's happening now as we record this Tuesday morning
he's leading a group of investors who are trying to execute a hostile takeover of a
Nonprofit that controls the artificial intelligence company open AI and that's the company behind chat GPT
It's headed by Sam Altman.
Musk had been involved with this group early on.
So whatever this is about,
I'm just wondering, like, if Elon Musk has some control
over this huge AI company.
I know Elon Musk is working on his own AI company,
but it's not as developed as OpenAI
is.
Correct me if I'm wrong.
Yeah.
But if someone like Musk who has endorsed conspiracy theories and is far right now in
some of his politics, if he takes over or him and the consortium take over a really
major AI company,
and if they feed it the kind of things that Musk believes now, certain conspiracy theories,
if that gets into AI as fact, what would that mean?
And am I just interpreting this all wrong?
Yeah, I mean, look, Elon is an interesting person on AI where he has all those beliefs,
you know, personally about the world and culture and politics.
And he also has beliefs that I think would be contradictory to some of kind of the right
word shifts of the artificial intelligence industry, where Elon Musk is actually very
concerned about AI.
You know, he's signed a lot of public letters urging there to be AI safety,
and he's concerned about the company, OpenAI, being too commercialized,
and sort of he's concerned about this jump from a non-profit to a for-profit company.
So he does not have conventional beliefs of kind of the right here, which is in general, you know,
more pro-techn technology development and pro
Frankly just profit motive musk has some deeply or concerned and frankly pretty long-held beliefs that AI
Could be a problem. So he does not fit neatly into a box on this issue
So do you see liberal billionaires trying to put money to stop with the conservative
bill?
Like how are the liberal billionaires reacting to all of the very conservative billionaires
that are embedded in one way or another in the Trump administration?
Michael O'Brien Liberal billionaires have really been MIA, Terry.
I mean, it's been very hard to see sort of any leadership from
wealthy Democrats about what exactly their plan is to take on Trump. They're not really
saying much of anything. I mean, some wealthy Harris donors have adopted some of that kind
of Kumbaya message where they're trying to support the new president. Other people have
been kind of in a daze. You know, Reid Hoffman, for instance, who's kind of one of the leading
Liberal donors I reported a few months ago was telling friends that he was considering leaving the United States entirely
I think lots of these wealthy Democrats
legitimately feel
they could be targets of persecution or you know from a Trump led FBI or
that their businesses could get special attention. And the sense
from wealthy Democrats is they should just lay low. So that's what's sort of happening
right now. You know, we've seen the beginnings of kind of conversations or the concepts of
conversations about how exactly they should spend their money to resist Trump. But right now, it is not a time for a wealthy Democrat
to feel like they can speak out about Trump.
And that's why you're not really seeing much publicly.
Privately, wealthy Democratic donors I talk to
are still sort of in blame game mode a little bit.
They're still trying to understand
how Harris lost exactly.
They're still facing questions about,
should they have been more vocal about Joe Biden in 2024 and 2028 is, of course, a really,
really long time away. So we're not really seeing much leadership from them.
Danielle Pletka If you're just joining us, my guest is Theodore Schleifer, and he's a
reporter for The New York Times who covers, among other things, the intersection of Silicon Valley and Washington politics.
We'll be right back after a short break. This is Fresh Air.
As you've pointed out, there isn't a lot of transparency in what Musk is doing in terms of job and cost cutting.
And he has said secrecy is necessary to the team of young people who has carrying
out his orders at departments and agencies.
Russell Vaught, who's the new head of the Office of Management and Budget, said,
We want the bureaucrats to be dramatically affected.
When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are
increasingly viewed as the villains.
And Trump for years has been calling, for instance, the press the enemy of the people.
And Musk has accused USAID of being a criminal organization and said, time for it to die.
Does that seem a little unusual that Musk could say, oh, we just don't want to make
our own people targets when some of the Trump administration people have really put targets
on the back of so many people?
Sure.
I mean, this is a war, in Elon Musk's view, a war on the bureaucracy.
And there's no Geneva Convention for this war. There are no beliefs from the
Musk team that they have to be fair or believe that, you know, they're required to disclose
the names of their generals, even as they kind of go after the other generals. I mean,
we've seen the Musk team, I'm exaggerating for dramatic effect there a little bit, but,
you know, they genuinely believe that they are in hand-to-hand combat with
a bureaucracy that wants to kill them, right?
I mean, for instance, there's, at these agencies right now, there's an intense resistance to
kind of giving the Musk team what they want because they think the Musk team wants to,
you know, attack them.
And so we just have right now, you know, a very, very, very intense
personal fight between rank-and-file bureaucrats
and these kind of 23-year-old Elon Musk acolytes
who are fighting over whether or not
they get access to this Medicaid system or this HR payroll
or yada, yada, yada.
So one of the big concerns is that Musk team has wanted
access to the Treasury Department's payment system and the Treasury
Department disperses about five trillion dollars in funding and it has everybody's
sensitive information in there. How far has the Musk team gotten in their attempt
to get into the payment system?
Pretty far.
You know, the Musk team has been sort of fighting the bureaucracy, the Treasury Department,
over what sort of access they could get to the payment system.
But as of now, you know, the Elon team and the Treasury team are sort of trying to find
a middle ground and the courts are trying to kind of enforce the middle ground to make sure that everyone is peachy with the arrangement.
You know, I think at first the Musk team, which is led by this guy named Tom Krause,
who's an executive from Silicon Valley, who recently was appointed to a top position at
the Treasury Department, they're trying to have what's called read-only access to that $5 trillion in payments.
Essentially what that would mean would be that the Musk team and Krauss could read kind
of all payments that go out to make sure that they're complying with Trump's executive orders.
You know, Ilana said publicly, he wants to make sure that we're reading things like to
make sure that no money is going off terrorists from Treasury.
But the concern, especially for people who believe in the separation of powers, is that
this could be a way for Musk to essentially unilaterally decide to stop payments of things
that have been authorized by Congress.
That if you suddenly have the ability to read Treasury payments as they're going out the door.
Couldn't Musk somehow find a way to, eh, we shouldn't spend the money on, you know,
this thing or that thing. Let's cut towards 20 trillion right here, this 30
trillion right there. And suddenly that makes Elon Musk more powerful than
Congress. And that sort of is the concern. And that's why this pretty technical
distinction over read-only access versus kind of a more
expansive power when it comes to Treasury's code, that's why that matters is because it
tells you whether or not Elon Musk can just kind of read the book or write the book.
Danielle Pletka The U.S. Digital Service is now renamed the
U.S. Doge service. And it was established in 2014 to
fix the federal government's online services. What can you tell us about this service and
what it means that it's now renamed with the Doge brand?
So the US digital service was started during the second Obama term as a way to get more
technologists into government.
And it largely was doing things like, you know, pushing for making it easier to file
your tax returns online or, you know, updating government websites, things that were pretty
non-controversial.
But it was established and it was an existing department.
And I think they had somewhere around 200 employees all around government, sort of being websites, things that were pretty non-controversial. But it was established and it was an existing department.
And I think they had somewhere around 200 employees all
around government, sort of being detailed to various
tasks.
DOGE, which originally was sort of conceived of as an
outside entity, sort of jujitsu-ed its way into
working as a successor organization sort of to the USDS, to the US Digital
Service. They just kept it called the United States Doge Service now instead.
And essentially what that enables the Doge team to do is they, you know, don't
need to create a new office. They're just kind of taking over the existing office
and they have now put all of their detailees into DOGE and into the USDS,
and they are now farmed out across various agencies,
you know, including the Office of Personnel Management,
which oversees kind of the Civil Service or the General Services Administration, the GSA,
which kind of manages government real estate.
But all these people technically work for the USDS. And it was a pretty clever way to get in the front door of the bureaucracy by sort
of taking a similar-ish institution that already existed and repurposing it for Musk's purposes.
Let's take another break here and then we'll talk some more. If you're just joining us, my guest is New York Times reporter Teddy Schleifer.
We'll be right back after a short break.
This is Fresh Air.
One of your articles was about investigating who are the people working with Musk on Doge,
the young people who are going into agencies and departments and trying
to lay off people and or fire them or and cut costs. What are some of the things you
were able to learn about who they are and how they're being selected?
There is about 40 of these people, we think, who are working for DOGE.
That's funny. I assume there are more because there are so many agencies and departments that they're working on.
Yeah, but you can be working at 26 different agencies before breakfast.
You know, a lot of these folks have multiple jobs simultaneously, multiple detail assignments simultaneously, and they sort of jump from, you know, DHS to, youHS to the education department,
depending on how the mood strikes them.
I think we're focusing a lot on the kind of the kids,
as we call them, even though there are official,
normal Washington types who are involved in this.
I don't wanna overstate it.
There are also a good amount of people who are involved
who are sort of just Elon friends
who are maybe in unofficial capacities. Various people from Musk's social network are sort of just Elon friends who are maybe in unofficial capacities.
Various people from Musk's social network are sort of involved. You know, Mark Andreessen has
called himself an unpaid intern to doge the billionaire venture capitalist. You know,
I think what their work is, what they're doing is pretty novel, obviously, and they're getting into
lots of fights with the bureaucracy in a way that befits sort of the
Silicon Valley mindset of disruption, right?
That's the nice way to put it.
They are not believing that they need to go through the standard bureaucratic process
of establishing a commission to investigate a task force to blah, blah, blah.
They just want to go in and do it.
A lot of the people involved share Musk's distaste and disdain for the status quo.
Like, I think we're seeing a lot of these people who have come in, who have worked for Elon Musk
in some capacity. They're all kind of in Musk's image. And he's a very, very divisive,
polarizing leader. But there are people that surround Elon Musk have kind of a cultish
devotion to him. I mean, I think that we're seeing the reason these people are getting
involved in Doge is because they love Elon Musk and they will do what Elon Musk tells
them to do. And that's why they followed him to Washington, D.C.
When we talk about like spending in Washington politics or
political power in terms of private enterprise, it was always about
corporations and now you're specializing in writing about billionaires who own
corporations, multiple corporations in the case of Elon Musk. So do you think the
balance of power has kind of switched to individuals as
opposed to companies?
Certainly post-citizens united, you know, there's been this ability of individuals to spend unlimited money on political campaigns and that has
empowered wealthy people as opposed to wealthy corporations, which you know have always been very very influential in Washington,? I mean, they have trade groups, they have lobbyists, they, you know, have donated money
to campaigns, and they still can, obviously.
But the ability of private individuals, I find just such an interesting story because
they're peculiar, right?
They're human beings.
They have their own beliefs and their ability to act on them, and they have agency in a
way that some ways corporations do not because they're risk averse and, you know, ruled by
committee and as philanthropists and as donors and as political givers and as billionaires,
these people are empowered in a way that corporations can feel kind of defanged, they can feel slow.
Certainly not true of Musk's corporations, but I love the stories about the people.
So a lot of Trump watchers have described Trump as somebody who wants to be the person
getting the most attention, whether it's on the media or in terms of political power.
And Musk is getting so much attention now.
And you're contributing to that by writing so much,
by reporting so much on Musk and his influence
in the Trump administration.
There was a Time magazine cover where
it was Musk at the resolute desk in the White House.
Some people are predicting that this
relationship can't last long because they both want to be the most powerful person.
Do you have any insight into that?
Yeah, I feel like I'm tempted to offer a contrarian opinion that I just believe it's not going
to blow up immediately.
Look, the dirties are clearly too large-than-life personalities, to put them mildly.
The possibilities of this
blowing up need no explanation. I think the reasons why it could not blow up is these
are people who are enjoying each other's company genuinely. You know, I think that they actually
do have a good personal relationship at this point. And also there's PR reasons to not
have it blow up. I think they're both enjoying the perception of access and the perception of power because
both ways.
I think Trump likes having surrounding himself with someone who knows a lot about things
and is able to teach him about certain things.
Trump obviously also respects wealth and respects Elon's abilities in the business world.
I find myself thinking it's going to last longer than most people do, I'll tell you that.
Teddy Schleifer, thank you so much for talking with us.
You bet.
Theodore Schleifer covers the intersection
of Silicon Valley and politics
and the global influence of billionaires
for the New York Times.
We recorded the interview yesterday
before the Trump Musk press conference.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, our guests will be filmmaker, photographer, professor, and writer,
Ramell Ross. He's nominated for an Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay for the film Nickel Boys,
which he also directed. The movie is also nominated for Best Picture.
It's about two young black men in the 60s attempting to survive a brutal reformatory.
I hope you'll join us.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Ann Riebel Donato,
Lauren Krenzel, Theresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thea Challener, Susan Yacundy, Anna Bauman,
and Joel Wolfram.
Our co-host is Tanya Mosley.
I'm Terry Gross.