Modern Wisdom - #1004 - Sam Corcos - Inside DOGE, The IRS & How to Scam the US Government
Episode Date: October 9, 2025Sam Corcos is an entrepreneur, CEO of Levels, and a special advisor to the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). What’s really happening inside the U.S. government? For the first time, a DOGE... insider exposes the chaos, corruption, and dysfunction plaguing Washington. How did America’s most powerful system lose its way, and can we climb out of this financial and technological free fall? Expect to learn what is currently happening inside DOGE, why Sam decided to step into a political position, Sam’s biggest misconceptions he had about the government before he went inside, how the government actually operates internally, why it’s so hard to make change in the government, how to scam the US government, how to solve the government contract problem, how the IT in the government got so dysfunctional and how we might get out of this, what the IRS actually does and if tax collection is actually viable to help the debt problem, and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get up to $350 off the Pod 5 at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom Get $100 off the best bloodwork analysis in America at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get a Free Sample Pack of LMNT’s most popular flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Timestamps: (0:00) Becoming Chief Information Officer of the Treasury Department (6:22) The Politics of Working in Politics (11:19) What It’s Really Like Working for the US Government (25:05) How Do You Change the System? (37:46) What Has Sam Sacrificed for the Government? (43:51) The Procurement Process is Broken (53:47) How Much Money Does the Government Really Spend? (01:01:28) Why is Finding Engineers Proving Difficult? (01:10:56) Are Young People Favoured for Government Jobs? (01:15:54) US Media is Fuelling Federal Mistrust (01:25:55) DOGE is More Than a Meme (01:30:04) How Does DOGE Save Money? (01:38:05) Why Spending Cuts are So Important (01:43:02) Modernisation Isn’t the Answer (01:48:55) Is Data Security at Risk? (01:55:09) The Reduction in Force Process is Brutal (02:00:58) What Sam Would Go Back and Change About DOGE (02:10:06) What Does the IRS Actually Do? (02:16:32) How are Tax Policies Really Enforced? (02:25:52) People are at the Core of DOGE (02:35:26) How Long Will It Take to Fix IT Systems? (02:42:14) What Have Been the Biggest Changes in Sam’s Work? (02:52:32) How Will Systematic Changes Stick? Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Before we get started, I'm going on tour this winter around the U.S. and Canada, and you can join me.
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That's Chris Williamson.com. All right. Let's get into it.
You got a new job. Congratulations. How'd that happen?
I had a lot of friends who reach out to me from the administration, saying that they really needed help doing, really looking into IRS modernization.
It's one of the worst managed IT projects in the government. I think maybe second only to the VA's attempt at implementing an electronic health record system. It's about $15 billion over budget. It was actually started right around the time I was born. And it's still ongoing.
still five years away. It was five years away in 1991. It's still five years away.
So they said they really needed somebody to look into this and see if we could fix it.
So I've always wanted to do government service. It's a thing that has been important to me.
I care a lot about the future of the country, especially the national debt. But I kind of assume this would be a thing that I would do in my 50s after I'm retired.
But my wife really encouraged me to give this a go.
So about six months ago, I made the plunge, and here I am.
What are you?
I'm the chief information officer of the Treasury Department.
That's my official role.
What's that mean?
What's that guy do?
So the chief information officer in private company is usually the CTO, is the primary technical leader in the government as a chief information officer.
It's an interesting one.
I think a lot of what I've learned is tracking the history of a lot of these things can be interesting. So the chief information officer really stems from, if you go way back, it stems from when it was effectively a librarian role, if you want to call it that, where it, the, the legacy of chief information officer is when things were in filing cabinets. Where is the information? How do you keep track of this stuff? And it slowly evolved into what it is today.
But part of the challenge that I've seen internal to government is that most of the chief
information officers, at least before this administration, were non-technical.
And the main reason is there's no technical standards or requirements for the role.
And so you can kind of see how you get there where when it's a librarian role, it's not,
there's no requirement to really know how computers work.
And if you never update the standards, you just sort of.
sort of fall into the situation.
Is that prescient that not only were the systems not updated, even the job title wasn't?
I think it's less the job titles, more the qualifications for the job.
Like, we have standards for being like the chief counsel of an agency.
You have to be a lawyer.
I think most people would think that's reasonable.
We just never updated that for technology or in government, they really call it IT.
That's the more common way they would describe it.
It also feels like an outdated time.
Yeah, for sure.
How technically are you?
Me?
I've been a software developer for more than 10 years.
In my most recent role, I was the CEO, so I didn't do as much coding.
I did in the early days.
I actually poked around in my GitHub account a few months ago.
I've contributed about a million lines of production code, so I'm not the best engineer
that I know, but I've done a lot of it.
That sounds like an H-index for engineers compared with academics.
Yeah, it's, it is definitely something that if you, if you optimize for it, it becomes useless because it's very easy to just like create a bunch of boilerplate code and pretend like you did it. But it's, I'm sure it's correlated. What's your relationship with Doge? I was originally brought in through Doge in March. So that's when I started. I was put in at the Treasury Department with my primary focus being the IRS, which is trying to figure out.
how to land the plane on this on this irs modernization program what did you think you were walking
into i really didn't know i've read a lot of things uh i've heard stories from friends of mine
who have been in the government in the past uh some of those things turned out to be true
some of them turned out not to be true um i think my the thing that i was really encouraged by
which is an expectation that I had coming in is that my friends told me that this administration is willing to make changes that have never been on the table before.
When it requires significant structural changes to an organization that requires a lot of courage that historically we've been shuffling things around, that people are willing to make those changes now, that for the most part has been true, which has been very exciting.
I think one specific example, which when I was about, when I was about a month in, I started to recognize at the IRS that we had a major problem with the technical background of the leadership team in IRS IT, which is to say there were not enough people in leadership that knew how computers work.
And that was the upstream problem of a lot of the other issues that we have because if you don't know how, if you don't even know what the words are in the scope that you're responsible for, it's very hard to make good decisions. And these are not insignificant decisions. These are multi-billion dollar technology decisions made by people who don't understand it. So I, this would have been in April. So really peak tax season. I made the recommendation.
that we put effectively the entire leadership team of IRS IT,
which was about 50 people on administrative leave,
which we can get into what all these terms mean,
which effectively means we're removing them from their roles.
We're not firing them,
but we're putting them on leave
and we're replacing them with the people who are technical enough to do the job.
And that requires a lot of courage.
Nothing like that had ever been done before as far as I know.
You said you had been assured that going in, people were ready for change.
I have to predict that the 50 people who were put on administrative leave were probably not so keen on the changes that were being made in that regard.
So it sounds good from the outside coming.
We're ready for change.
Like this is, there's been enough that's been done.
People are sick of the ossification and the slow lumbering behemoth that is internal government systems that need updating.
but that can't be everybody and maybe it's not even most perhaps it's some key decision makers
so that power struggle between move fast break things doge de gens and existing government
bods that are scared they're going to lose their job i mean anybody that's worked in an office
understands that navigating politics in the office is difficult you are in politics so what are
the politics of politics like when it comes to that power struggle so the the specifics
the interesting thing about, well, we'll take the specific example.
So a lot of the folks that I talked to, some of the people who we ended up putting on administrative leave, I have a lot of empathy for them because a lot of them really didn't intend to be in that role.
They were put into that role.
And several of them, I can think of some specifically from conversations that I had.
they knew that they were not technical enough to be in this role and they knew that they were not making good decisions and they felt some guilt about it and they were put into that position for because it's largely promotions are largely tenure based so just by being around long enough you end up in these roles that's a whole set of problems in the government is that almost everyone in their performance reviews almost everyone gets a four or a five no matter what and so it's very hard to
make sure that the people in these roles are actually the ones who know what they're doing.
So some of these folks are really hardworking, good people.
They're just put in a position where they could not be successful.
And I talked to some of them afterwards and like they're obviously not happy.
But they didn't lose their jobs.
They're just on administrative leave so that we can shuffle things around.
But, you know, it's a lot of them really understand why this is happening.
And they, they know deep down that this is for the best.
but it is it is uncomfortable just lingering on your appointment first yeah what is the role that
this executive order thing plays in what you do and how you arrived at this um i think the doge
executive order sets up the ability to create the office i was actually never i think this this is
a common question is like what even is doge and uh it's it's a it's an office in the executive office
the presidency, the U.S. Doge Service. I've never been a part of that organization. I was
brought in directly as an employee of Treasury. I get my deliverables and my instructions from the
Treasury team. I coordinate a lot with the Doge people. I think there's been a lot of court documents
that describe me as Doge affiliated. So you're Doge adjacent. Doge adjacent. Yeah. So like,
Alt Doge. It's like whatever these definitions are, it's kind of amorphous. But yeah, I, I,
it's allowed us to
there are specific authorities
in that executive order
that give us the ability
to review contracts
and to make sure that we have review
on a lot of the things
that are being done in these agencies.
Are you different
as a political appointee
rather than a career public servant?
Functionally there is not a huge difference.
I think the only big difference
is that you can be
more easily fired as an appointee.
It's very hard to get fired as a career civil servant.
Right.
Okay.
I think obviously America is pretty politically divided and we're still in the aftermath of
November.
What made you feel comfortable about stepping into a political position?
I mean, it's technically called a political appointee, but the reality is everyone wants
the IT systems to be good.
Everyone wants the government to work better.
I did a news thing with Secretary Besson a while ago, and there was some concern that I had that there would be negative repercussions from that.
But I was surprised that really in a bipartisan way, people that I know on any side of the spectrum were just really glad that somebody who knows what they're doing is trying to fix the stuff.
So I think it depends a lot on what it is that you're doing.
In my case, I'm really just there to fix the computers.
America has the fifth highest government expenditure per capita in the world.
Is that a good thing?
I did not know that.
That's probably not.
I think in theory it's fine if there wasn't such a large deficit.
If we were not going into such debt in order to pay for this, I think it would be fine.
but the our national debt is reaching a critical point where we will never there's like some
runaway effect that we need to we need to get that under control I want to know how they got oh there
we go this is the us debt clock dot org and all of the numbers are massive what stands out here
I mean the 37 trillion dollars where's that right over there over my shoulder that's really the
top line number. It's just an astoundingly large number. We have a hundred thousand dollars in debt
per citizen. And it's going up at about $100,000 a second. Yeah, pretty much. Yeah. That's the,
that's really the intent of Doge. What's the Doge clock? What's that? I don't actually know. I think
that's maybe counting the amount of money saved from Doge, but yeah, it looks like it. Maybe the,
based on the goals of the organization.
So I'm interested in how the government operates internally.
What's it like inside of it?
Everybody thinks about this.
You hear the stories of, you know, the sort of hallowed halls, the Chesterfield sofas,
the sort of cigar lounge type.
I might be speaking a bit British here.
But still, what is being inside of the government like?
How slow and ossified is it?
How keen are people to change?
and people just sort of sat back with their feet up, not doing any work?
I'll give two different examples that show how it can go.
So this kind of ties back to when I mentioned around.
From the conversations I've had with friends of mine who have been in previous administrations that things are slow, decisions don't get made, everyone, the whole name of the game is cover your ass.
Everyone is like every decision is made by committee so no one can be blamed.
That's the whole game.
It's all about optics.
At least in my limited experience, I've only been in government for six months and I've only really been in treasury.
We're lucky, as I think many of the other agencies are, that we have a secretary, somebody who's leading the organization who's willing to make the hard calls.
Oftentimes everyone knows what needs to be done, but there's just a lack of willingness to do it.
So the example that I gave before, putting those people on leave, that was a decision that
the secretaries team had to make.
And after we did it, there was about a week of everyone panicking.
And then everything almost immediately got better, as in better than it was even before,
as in our things that were stuck for years started getting delivered in weeks because we
put decision makers, technical decision makers in technical decision making roles.
And so we were able to make decisions way faster.
And I remember one of our best engineers who's a who's been there for more than 10 years.
He, uh, this is right after we made this change.
He said, uh, I don't know if this is good yet, but this is definitely the most different
it's ever been here.
And so the, the willingness to make that hard decision, I think comes from the top.
And there's a lot more of that than I think has been historically the case.
And now I'll give you a totally different example of a thing that I have been stuck on for
a long time. That's driving me nuts, which is I'm trying to get to the bottom of why the IRS
does so many things by fax. I'm working on trying to get the customer service software to be
better. And I'm listening on these calls. I'm working with the reps to try to improve these cycles.
And oftentimes when you're a taxpayer and you need to send us documents,
We say, okay, great, here's our fax number.
And this is the most common response, says, I don't know how to send a fax.
And like, well, it's the only way that we can receive data is by fax.
So you have to figure out how to fax this to us.
And I ask, why are we doing this by fax?
And the answer is, well, there's a policy, there's a belief.
There's some reason why we do this, which there are many people who believe that faxing is the most secure.
sure way to send information. And that email is not, the internet is not, it's fax. That's like the
gold standard of information security. And I've talked to the federal CISO. I've talked to a whole
bunch of people in cybersecurity in the government saying, am I missing something? Or is this crazy?
And this might have been true 25 years ago, but it's definitely not true now. And I've been trying to
get to the bottom. We receive 60 million faxes per year at the IRS. We have, I believe, 50,000
active fax lines. And the struggle that I have is trying to figure out why do, why are we still
receiving faxes? What policy says that we need to? How do I change this? And it's like, I'll talk
to somebody. They say, oh, the Office of Tax Policy is responsible for that. I'll talk to
them. They say, oh, no, that's over the IRS. I talked to this person. And I just, I cannot for the
life of me. Still, right now, this is, I'm actively working on this. I cannot figure out how, like,
where are the levers? Who makes this decision? And then how do we implement this change?
There's just, there's so much inertia. And I guess you would call it bureaucracy. I don't think this
is unique to government. I imagine this might be similar at very large corporations, which I've never
worked in. Yeah, that's a, that's a great point. How much?
much of this is a unique issue that is to do with government and how much of this is when
you get an organization of this size, dis-economies of scale come along for the ride and change
is difficult? I think most of it is probably the same as you would see in like a legacy large
corporation. I think the added complexity is the fact that you have a staff that you have
very limited leverage to change.
So there was one guy who came in, I forget which agency, and he was brought in to make some
pretty significant changes to the agency.
And he asked me like, all right, so how do I do this?
In my experience, he's been the CEO before a company.
In my experience, you come in, you find the good people, you find the bad people, you fire
all the bad ones, and you promote all the good ones.
And I said, okay, well, you're going to have to figure out how to do this without any of those things because you can't, you can't fire the people who are not good.
You just can't.
It's not.
Why?
Well, this is a whole long conversation about civil service and what it means.
There is a reason why it exists.
And we have to go back to like 1880 to explain.
why this exists
and it exists for reasons
that makes sense
we may be at a point
where we've over-indexed
but back in the day
this would have been like Andrew Jackson era
they used to call it the spoils system
where when your party would win
an election
you would fire basically the whole government
and you would install all of your buddies
and there was a lack of continuity
So, like, major government functions would just stop working because we have these new people and who don't know how any of these things work.
They would make a whole bunch of money and then they would leave when they lose the next election.
So this is not good.
So the civil service reforms, I think it was like 1883, they created this concept of like a permanent civil service where there's some class of people who are apolitical who,
who you cannot just willy-nilly fire all these people
just because you won an election.
They have certain protections,
which I think is generally a good thing
because you do get continuity of service for these functions.
It is now the case that I think there's roughly,
roughly a couple million people who are civil servants
and you have something like 4,000 appointees.
So we might have too many people
that have these sorts of protections.
And in theory, you can fire them.
But there's a whole process to doing so.
They have to get a poor performance review, I think three times in a row.
It's multiple times in a row.
And they're spaced out pretty significantly.
If you ever give somebody a poor performance review,
the unions come after you, and it's like 10 times more work to deal with it.
So a lot of people just give everyone a five and just like move on.
So the most common way that I've heard from inside of government, people have been there for a long time.
The most common way to get a poor performer off your team is to promote them.
Yeah.
Yeah, this is absolutely ubiquitous.
Like, everyone does this.
You pass the parcel up.
Yeah.
You just like give them a promotion, move them to another team, and we can keep this.
There are some people who are really diligent about doing performance reviews and keeping quality teams.
But they are fewer and far between.
I think a lot of people assume that government employees are lazy or incompetent.
What's been your experience with that?
What's the proportion of people who are fit for purpose and not?
I think there's, there are some people who are really excellent.
Most of my exposure has been at the IRS.
We have, when I came in, we had about 8,500 people in the CIO's office, which is the product design engineering, but mostly, ostensibly, it's mostly engineering.
I interviewed a lot of people.
We have, from the folks that I talked to, at least, at least a couple hundred good engineers.
There might be more, but from the people I've talked to, at least a couple hundred.
there are a lot of people who just they don't pass the what would just say you do here test you ask very basic questions about their role and they can't even answer the simplest questions like if you're if you are if your job is you are the engineer responsible for data integrity and I ask you a basic question of like okay so how does data go from here to here and they go oh I don't know we should ask so and so it's like okay is that just your answer for everything?
Like what do you actually do other than set up meetings?
There's a there's a really good book.
Do you read the book, Bullshit Jobs?
No, but I have an idea about what it is.
Yeah, there's a lot of that.
And because you can't really fire these people,
because you can't really give them negative performance reviews,
they just sort of, they're just sort of there.
As like a maybe a data point,
at most software companies that I've worked out or had exposure to,
The ratio of engineers to non-engineers within like a product design engineering function is something like five engineers to every one non-engineer.
Or if you're like a really tech-heavy company, it might be 10 to 1.
We're basically the inverse of that.
It's like 1 to 10.
There are so many people whose job it is is to like manage managers of managers, of contracts of managers.
There are some really good people, but it is not the majority.
And so finding those good people is really the name of the game.
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How hard is it to get changed to happen then? Just across the board, it seems like there's some
protections in place. There is this odd tenured professor thing going on, very procedural. There is
a disincentive for starting that process because you're going to get kicked in the ass off
the unions there will be social pressure as well did you hear about sandra sandra got you know
let go by that that sam guy from doge again uh if you want to make some changes happen
how much of a solvent have you been able to be with these new sort of powers to step in and
actually make sure it happen yeah i would say there are there are certain things that are relatively
easy to get the first step in.
This is one of the biggest surprises for me is specifically, as having been a CEO before,
one of the things that you learn is that you have to be very careful with what you say to
the team, because if you suggest an idea, it might just become the new company
priority without you realizing it and people just immediately action this thing.
It is about as far the opposite of that as you can imagine in the government.
You can say whatever you want and people just continue on the existing train tracks.
The president puts out an executive order that says, this is the new priority.
The secretary sends a message to the whole organization and says, this is the new priority.
And then you check in a couple weeks later and everyone's like, what, which thing?
And the number of times that I have had to just like really hound people to get these done, you can often find these, sometimes you have this thought of, you know, what we should really have. We should have this policy in place. But nobody's doing it. So we should write this policy. And then you discover that's actually been the policy for 15 years. Somebody 15 years ago had this idea, but it didn't actually happen. Could you give me an example of something?
Yeah. I mean, do not pay.
is a specific one. So do not pay is like it's a list of whenever there's like a fraudster using a
particular bank account. Before you send out money to that bank account, you want to check it against
the lists of known fraudulent bank accounts. And that's a, that's a thing that makes sense that
you'd want to do. That's been a thing that was supposed to be implemented in like 2013. So this isn't,
This isn't new, but the, I would say, if I was to say it concisely, the biggest surprise is that executive orders are not self-actualizing.
Just having the policy is a very small part of the amount of work that actually needs to get done to get these things implemented.
And under the hood, you really have to, you have to hound people.
I think if I were to say the one thing that the Doge people are particularly good at, it's knowing what the priorities are and making sure they get done.
The enforcement in a way.
Yeah.
And sometimes just doing it.
And there's a lot of times when there just is not the talent or capacity in-house to get it delivered.
And the process for outsourcing it to a contractor is so cumbersome.
onerous that sometimes you just have to do it yourself.
Have you spoken to Dominic Cummings?
No.
You know who he is?
He was Boris Johnson's enforcer right hand during COVID.
He was also the guy that Benedict Cumberbatch played in the movie about Cambridge Analytica.
Oh, yeah.
For Brexit.
So technically proficient has a substack.
You know, he's like sort of modern DGEN does podcasts wearing a baseball cap.
Anyway, I think it'd be interesting for you to speak to him.
So I'll intro you.
But he famously brought up a bunch of stories.
I'm going to just give you a few that will maybe make you feel a little bit less bad about your situation.
One was during COVID, there was no way to keep the figures centralized.
So they were written on pieces of paper and then he would write them on a whiteboard.
And Boris apparently was just shooting from the hip based on what newspapers were put in front of.
him that day and that was where the policies came from. There was a need to find a way to have
cloud document storage that people could live work on at the same time, but they didn't know
if Google Docs was sufficiently secure or the same for Microsoft Teams and stuff like that.
So they engaged a consultant company who I think spent multiple years and multiple millions of
pounds to tell them that we need to do it. We'll bootstrap it ourselves. Most impressively,
up until 2020, a good chunk of the NHS was still run on Windows XP. And there was a special
ransomware virus, want to cry or something else, that got released that affected like 1% of
NHS, thousands, tens of thousands of patient data went. Pages and fax machines still quite heavily
used. The rail system in the UK still famously uses fax machines and can't really explain
why or how that gets unwound. So I guess it's not just you. We do have a much older country.
So perhaps we have a little bit more of an excuse than you do. But when it comes to building
tech inside of government, does government do that? What does building software and tech inside
of government look like.
The interesting challenge
about building software
in the government
that my vantage point
is a little bit skewed
because the IRS
is basically a technology company
and a lot of other
government organizations
the technology is very much
a secondary consideration
for them
but for the IRS
almost everything we do
ultimately is downstream
of technology
if you want to do
enforcement
of tax. You have to use computers to figure out who is noncompliant. If you want to
pull up somebody's tax information when you're on the phone with them for customer service
to resolve an issue, you need the IT system to be good in order to do that. Virtually everything
we do is based on IT systems. So a lot of our systems are internally built. A lot of other systems
are built with vendors
and these
vendors are
I think the biggest challenge you have
is there's this core
incentive misalignment issue
that you have with the vendors
where because the people
making the decisions
on whether to sign a contract or not,
it's not their money.
You have this very large budget.
This is one of the other,
I'm not sure I would call it,
a misconception. But it's commonly said people say, oh, the budgets are so tight. I can tell you
firsthand, especially with NIT at the IRS, the budgets are not tight. We spend so much money on these
things, but nobody cares. Nobody's paying attention. We would, we will gladly spend hundreds of
millions of dollars with some vendor to build a thing over the next five years, but we won't
pay our engineers slightly more money
because of some weird statutory thing
where you can't compensate engineers
at even close to market rates
once you reach a certain threshold.
So I'll give you
a very specific example that I'm dealing
with right now. There's a vendor
that we wanted to work with
to build a particular system.
When you say vendor, what do you mean?
A vendor is like Accenture, Deloitte,
Booz Allen, Hamilton, Lidos, Palantier.
There's like a whole list
companies that are contractors that work commonly with the government.
I'm sure there are thousands of them, but there are some that are bigger and more well-known
than others.
I think Booz Allen Hamilton is something like 97% of their revenue from the government.
They are like one of the quintessential vendors.
The one of these that I'm talking to now, there was a previous vendor that we were using,
and they were really taking advantage of the government.
on pricing. And so I talked to one of the new vendors and said, can you do this for us and how
much would you charge? And it was a much lower rate. I think it was something like $2 million a year
is what they offered. And I said, okay, great, but that's the price, right? I just want to make sure
that that's going to be the price that we pay. They said, yep, you know, we're not like those other guys.
It's $2 million. And there's a couple other projects they're working on as well. The first six months
go really well, great. Then the contract comes up for a renegotiation. And now they want
$100 million a year. And I'm asking them, this is, I thought we talked about $2 million for
this, $250,000 for that. It's like, oh, that was our pilot pricing. It's like, if I had known
that you were going to raise your price arbitrarily by 20x for no reason whatsoever, I would not have
agreed to this. But now we're in a position where we can't just stop because now they're in
our systems. And so now there's going to have to be this whole, we can either, we're either
going to come to terms with like a more reasonable price or we're going to have to find a new
we're going to start with a new vendor or we're going to have to bring it in house. And it's just so
tedious. Is that not what happens with all businesses though, that you use a third party,
they come in, they pull the wool over your eyes a little bit? Is this unique to?
government in some way? The only reason why it's unique to government is that historically nobody
in my seat says no. Right. You're seen as a soft touch. Yeah. This is how you negotiate with
government. Yeah. Basically, normally they would come back with a price like 100 million and they just
check, oh, is this within our budget? Yes. All right. Sign off. But I'll say, where did you come up with
these numbers? How are you defining this price? And they'll say,
Oh, well, we didn't actually change the price.
It was just a change in scope.
It's like, but no, it's the price is 20 times more.
And then they come back, this actually happened.
Like, well, what if it was like 50 million?
It's like, you can just, like, you can just like arbitrarily change the price like that.
Guys, what are we doing?
This is crazy.
Yeah.
And this is not the thing that they said directly.
They said, well, you know, usually when we talk to government, they don't negotiate on price.
People, government entities usually prefer a fixed price.
It's like, I don't see, that's completely irrelevant to me.
I want to know what it is that we're paying for, and what we're paying for seems to be something completely arbitrary.
So I think they're just used to not dealing with this, because actually, this maybe ties into a broader problem, which is that I'm in this role for some limited duration of time as the chief information officer of Treasury.
this role
I'm responsible
for something in the range
of like $10 billion
of spend per year
this role is paid
I think $160,000 a year
and you're not allowed
income from any other source
there's like a there's a rule against
like I can't do consulting
I can't do anything else
you also have to like
publicly disclose your finances
there's all these limitations
that come with it
and so
So historically, these people are not super experienced people who have run large technology
organizations before.
It's historically been a role where you get promoted internally from some role, usually
a non-technical role, and then you end up the CIO, and you're responsible for making these
decisions.
And I think over the last several decades at IRS, it just led to a lot of very bad decisions.
What have you had to give up to take on this role?
Well, the simplest one is money, but you can make money later.
I think the biggest, the hardest selling point for this is that it's not just that you make less money.
That's fine.
But for the types of people that they want to bring on, the pitch that you have to tell them is like, I hope you have a lot of money in savings.
Because as a result in taking this job, you'll probably burn down a lot of your savings.
And so I've been trying to advocate for, just make it, these are called, a lot of these leadership roles are SES.
There's the generals GS, which is like most government employees.
And then there's the SES, which is the executive leadership group.
There's about 8,000 SES, memory serves.
Just make the compensation average.
There's like industry average.
I think the role that I'm in should probably be compensated something in the range of
like a VP of engineering, a Walmart would be probably a reasonable comp, but this role,
the CIO often makes less than the engineers on the team.
And I think that it leads to a lot of challenges when it comes to both keeping people in there
who actually care.
Like this is, I found myself struggling with this where there are some kind of,
contract. There's one that comes to mind that was a couple weeks ago, $35 million for some
set of new toys that we really didn't need, but it's technically in the budget. And I just said,
no, we don't need this. And a lot of people were upset. And I found myself in the back of my head
going like, why do I care? This is not my money. I could just say yes. And then this problem goes away,
and no one will care. There's not a single person that will care. By me saying no, there are only people
who are upset, and there's like this ambiguous win for the taxpayer. Of course, I still did say no,
but you can feel that in the back of your head, and you're thinking, like, you really need
people in these positions to care enough to be willing to make those hard calls.
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than Korea's civil servants.
Hmm.
I'm not sure that that's the framing.
I would say why should they trust people with substantial relevant industry experience
versus people who oftentimes stumble their way into these leadership roles.
I think that's probably the way that I would frame it.
And it's not even like trust as in they're going to do anything nefarious.
It's just when you work in an organization, you want your leaders to make good decisions.
And I think especially within technology, you want people who make good decisions in these roles.
And one of the consequences of not having this is just this contractor bloat.
And like a very specific and relevant example is the amount of money.
that we were spending at the IRS on cyber security contractors.
It was just astounding.
It was hundreds of millions of dollars a year.
And we were doing a contract review and we asked all of the leaders of these groups to justify their contracts.
Like which of these are mission critical, which of these are not, which can we de-scope?
The cyber team came back, said 100% of their spend was mission critical.
Not a single thing could be changed.
We moved on during that administrative leave portion.
We put those leaders on leave.
We brought in the cyber engineers who really understood what these contracts do.
And we just went line by line.
And on, I would guess about a third of them, we hadn't even used this vendor in years.
And we were still paying them $10, $20, $30 million a year.
And just nobody cares.
And when it's not your money, there is some non-Zer.
risk that if you cancel a contract, something bad might happen. And there is zero benefit
of canceling it for you at all. There's zero benefit. You can just ask for more money and you
will probably get it. And then that's it. So finding people who are willing to make those calls,
and this kind of ties into the industry comparison, if the IRS were a private company, it would
have gone bankrupt many, many years ago because people would stop buying the service because it's bad.
you'd have some feedback loop where people recognize these problems and they stop funding it.
Government contractors have been pretty vilified, I think, by Doge and other people over the last few months.
How come?
Like, what is it specifically about the contractors that have got the eye of Sauron turned around on?
There are many things.
I think the biggest one is this core incentive misalignment problem, which is the pricing is often arbitrary, and they will claim that it's not.
They say, oh, it's firm, fixed price.
Kind of like the one that I mentioned earlier.
He said, oh, we didn't change the price at all.
It's firm fixed price.
We charge the same price to everyone.
It's just a scope change.
It's like, okay, but we're not getting anything different, and it costs more.
So what's going on here?
a lot of the contractors some of this is not even specifically the fault of the contractors so like i'll
give you i'll give you a specific example of a type of problem that you experience so if you want to
do something simple like hey i want to sign up for this online service and it's like ten dollars
there might be some threshold where you can do it but in general it's like great we need to
set up a contract vehicle which could take a year
And you have to go through this whole rigimal role of like a competitive bidding process is what it's called.
The procurement systems that we have today, the process that we go through to procure things is totally and utterly broken.
And it leads to disastrous and bad outcomes.
So like if you wanted to do that, you'd have to do this competitive bid.
And this is at least the case for IRS.
I know from other discussions is the case a lot of other agencies as well, which is that the
if you are in technology and you need a specific piece of software,
you'll write up the RFP, the proposal for what you need.
That then goes to the procurement team.
At that point, it's basically a black box.
Usually, the engineer has no further input into what is selected, who selects it,
they'll often just end up with some random vendor for something that is somewhat related
to what they asked for, and then they just have to make do.
The other challenge is that because we have these salary caps for most, for all roles, really,
but for a lot of the very specialized technical roles, we can't really be competitive with hiring some of these roles.
So in the early to mid-career, we can actually be reasonably competitive.
We can pay engineers something like 160, 180.
the cap is $2.26, I believe.
So you can be reasonably competitive for those roles.
But once you get into like mid to late career, which is when people really specialize, there's just no way to pay $250,000 ever.
It just does not exist.
And so there are some, I think there is a special thing where there are a total of 800 people in the government that can exceed that number.
And it requires a whole process to do.
But the only way you can hire that 250,000 person, the way that you would do it is you would hire some contractor, one of these large entities that I mentioned before.
You pay them $500,000 to funnel $250,000 to the person that you actually wanted to hire.
And they'll arbitrage off the top.
And then they'll arbitrage off the top.
And this whole system incentivizes those kinds of things.
How important is getting above 225 for the sort of technical talent that you need to run the government?
Well, this is the, this is the interesting thing is that for the most part, you don't, but there are some that are crucially important.
The IRS, as I mentioned, when I arrived, had about 8,500 people in IT.
It's now about 6,000 plus another, I think, 6,500 contractors.
Yeah.
And so the numbers are often misleading.
and it's hard to really get a handle on who is doing what and how many people are there.
There are maybe a hundred of those roles in total where you would really like to be able to pay up to maybe $300,000.
And it would make such an impact on the organization to be able to retain your really technical high context people that are there already.
And to be able to bring in people who have a little.
lot of experience with this stuff. If you fix the contractor problem, what would improve?
Well, I'll give you another specific example of like the contract, the procurement process
generally is we have this big initiative for to eliminate paper processing at the IRS. We spend
something ballpark with like labor and all this stuff, ballpark a half a billion dollars a
here on paper processing.
The,
we want to use external vendors.
This is what people in the commercial,
in the commercial space do all the time.
There are vendors,
they take in paper,
they use robots to digitize them,
and they basically just send you an API request.
So technically,
you're still receiving paper,
but your organization doesn't even need to know about that.
It's just,
you don't need a warehouse.
You don't need any of that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We have this gig.
gigantic warehouse in Kansas City.
I can show you pictures like there's paper
stacked to the ceiling. And it's just
some of these things are months,
sometimes even years backlogged,
just like sitting there because it takes so
long to process these things.
So the
when I first
started, I said this is really
obvious. It's way less expensive to use
the vendor. It scales way better.
There are far fewer issues
using these vendors. So we should just
do that. Great. We started the process. We have to write up the proposal. We do a competitive
bidding process to get the vendors. We get a bunch of vendors who sign up. Cool. We pick a couple
of the vendors. Then it gets contested, which is a thing where if you believe, if you're one of
the other vendors and you believe that the process is unfair or that one of the other vendors
was selected unfairly, you can contest it. It costs, I believe, $100 and you can just do it. Anyone can do it.
And then the process stops for 30 days.
And then there was some situation we had to re-compete it,
which then takes another, however, 30, 60 days.
Then you have to do a new analysis.
Then it gets contested again.
And then it's just like, we, I don't even,
we started this process of zero paper in April.
We don't even have the contract awarded yet.
to start on the project.
And this costs us more than a million dollars a day
that we don't have this implemented,
and nobody cares because we just have to follow the process.
Because if you don't, it can get overturned
and it can get contested.
And it's just, it's maddening.
It's a million dollars a day.
And I'm trying to make this point.
We need this done.
We need to start.
I don't care which vendors we use.
We need to start moving on this project.
And it's like, well, you know,
we have to wait for another 30 days.
before we can do anything because of this rule
but you can also see how
this exists for a reason
which is you don't want
you don't want people to just choose their buddies
company right
that's I'm sure this checks and balances
you need some checks and balances and you can kind of see
how you got here which is
I'm sure there was a time
when as soon as people got into government
they just like traded favors with all the people
in the past or they traded future favors
of like, hey, company X, I'm going to get you all these contracts, and then as soon as I
leave government, you're going to give me this cushy job. So you need some checks and balances
there. It feels like we are way over-indexed on process and on like competitiveness to the point
where I'll give you another specific and absurd example, value-added resellers. So this is
a thing, because everything has to be a competitive process for the most part.
If you want licenses for some generic product, the kind of thing where you could just go
online and sign up for right now, be it like, I don't think licenses for Adobe or licenses
for Figma or licenses for any web application that you would use, like any SaaS product, right?
When you're looking for the thing, you're not looking for any similar to.
tool. You need this one specific license, right? But you can't compete that because you might
end up with some different license, which doesn't actually serve your purpose. So what you have
to do, this is a common thing is you have to create what's effectively a fake auction where
you find a value added, you find three or four value added resellers who are all reselling
that license. And they're competing on the price for that license. So they all just take a cut
off the top. They don't do anything, but they're there to provide cover for it looking like a
competitive process. This is ubiquitous. And I think this is one of the things that the people over
at GSA are looking to fix. General Services Administration is responsible for the procurement process
broadly. This is one of the big things they're looking to fix because they just they just take
money right off the top and they almost always do nothing. It's sort of a strange
contrast going on here
because people say the budgets are tight
in government
but you seem to be saying
the opposite at the same time
which one's true
are the misconceptions about how much money
government spends? I think the
if I'm
if I'm going to steal man
the way that like
when people are in the government and they say
that budgets are tight I think
probably the fairest way
to describe it is
they're saying that for the things that are important that we want to spend money on, we are not allowed to.
I think that's probably the fairest way to describe it. It's not that there's a lack of money overall.
Like the overall budget, yeah, the overall budgets are astoundingly large.
But when they say, hey, we'd like to spend $10,000 on this thing, it's like, well, which contract vehicle are you going to use?
Oh, well, we don't have one. Okay, well, you need a competitive bidding process.
maybe in a year and a half, you can get that. And we will have spent a million dollars to try to
come up with some contract vehicle so that you could spend $10,000. And so the amount of
overhead, I've described it to a friend of mine recently as in government, everything is at least
medium hard. There is no, like, just go, oh yeah, that's simple. Just go, you can handle that.
Everything requires so much time and overhead to do, especially with all this contract nonsense,
That it's, if you want to do something very simple, if you want to hire good people, the problem is you can't spend money on things that are useful because there's so much overhead to do all these things that you're trapped.
And so the amount of, I don't want to call it discretionary, but it's really like the, if you know what's important, like the paper initiative that I mentioned, I could argue budgets are tight because like we can't get money for this.
this thing. But we have money for this thing. We just can't do it. We're stuck.
So legislation is tight. Budgets are wide. You could say that or you could say the rules are
tight. The rules are cumbersome and onerous because most of the stuff for, it's called
FAR Federal Acquisitions Regulation, I think is what it stands for. I don't think hardly any of that
involves legislation. It's just like compounded rulemaking from GSA and other groups that just make
it really hard to do these things.
When it comes to the big spending government, how much of this is negligence, fraud,
incompetence, waste, like, how culpable is anybody here? Because it sounds like everyone
has plausible deniability. Yeah. I think one of the things that's been a strange observation
is this term waste, fraud, and abuse.
It's, you know, Trump and his first campaign ran on drain the swamp.
This has been a longstanding campaign goal.
I think what was most surprising was discovering how gray the boundaries are between these concepts of what is waste, what is fraud, and what is abuse.
I'll give you like a very specific example.
This was not at our agency, but I was talking to another CIO who's dealing with this.
They were doing contract review.
And they found a contract for a piece of software that's like $20 million a year that has been on the books for like five to 10 years.
And one of the Doge initiatives was matching the number of licenses that we pay for with a number of licenses.
that are in use. And they discovered that we'd been paying for these licenses. And not only was
nobody using it now, no one had ever used it. Not a single license had ever been activated for
this product. And it was set to just effectively auto renew. And every time it would come up for
renewal, people would say, oh, yes, mission critical. We have to keep it. Because nobody really knew
what it was for, who used it. So is that waste? Is it fraud? Is it abuse?
I think we could say it's wasteful at a minimum
but you start looking into like
oh well who runs the company
it's like oh well that's interesting because that guy
used to be in the government
I wonder if there's anything there
but nobody really looks into it
these boundaries get very fuzzy
and it's really hard to know what's going on
the
I would say in terms of like abuse
as well this ties into some of the other
procurement problem
like there's this whole program within the small business administration that has some
requirements on how many of your contracts go to small businesses and there's this it's the
8A program and there's something called the small disadvantaged businesses and frankly it's
just a huge scam the if you if you give a contract to a small disadvantage business you can
basically skip the whole procurement process. You can skip the competitive bidding process. You can pick the vendor that you want. It's like you get the fast lane, but it's capped. For some of these groups, it's capped at $25 million. So this is one of the things when I was doing contractor view. And you see all these things like $24.9 million, 24.9 million, 24.9 million. You're like, okay, something's going on here. And you can skip it. And these contractors or these, these, these, this. This. This. This.
work around, they will often take 10, 20, sometimes 50% off the top of a contract to do
actually nothing. On the books, they're supposed to do 51% of the work is what it says,
but they never do 51% of the work. I shouldn't say never, almost never. I have yet to find an
example having looked for this. I have yet to find an example where they do any of the work,
really. And they just funnel money. I think when I was talking to somebody who's investigating
this, they estimate that this might be as much as $80 billion a year in just graft. Yeah.
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A increasingly large group of people
are getting increasingly rich off.
that's right how's that feel from the inside and how does that feel as an american i would say from
the inside it's uh it's obviously very frustrating i think it's in some ways being in the role that i'm in
i feel encouraged because you can see how to fix it look at these big glaring problems
yeah it's it's uh it's both concerning and encouraging at the same time
Because you can see how bad it is, but also you have such an impact on being able to change these because you have the willingness and the authority to do it.
And you can have, you know, $10, $100 million swings with very little effort because people just haven't really looked at these things before.
So I think the biggest surprise to me has been for so many of these things, just the scale.
of how problematic a lot of these contracts are.
I think everyone kind of knows that the government is inefficient,
and that's kind of okay.
We all know that, but we all think these things might be 2x or 3x inefficient,
but you find examples where things are 100 X,
1,000 X beyond what you pay in the commercial sector,
and it's just there's just no excuse for it.
It's crazy.
Is there anything in addition to the technical talent,
problem that's contributing to dysfunction of IT systems and the government?
I think upstream of all of these things is leadership.
And I would separate out the, call it political leadership from administration to administration
and much more the career civil servant leadership.
There are some examples of entities that are within my.
purview that are pretty well run.
FinCEN, which does a lot of, they do a lot of international finance investigations.
They have their CIO, Amy Taylor, who's technical.
She's been there for a long time.
And she runs a tight ship.
And you can see downstream of good leadership tends to lead to good teams.
They tend to have technical talent.
And you see some of these organizations that have had,
like Tim Gribbens over at Bureau of the Fiscal Service.
He's been running that for six years.
It's had stable leadership.
He is very intentional about who's on his team.
They do performance management.
They take it seriously.
And they have a pretty good team.
So if you have good leadership,
things like what is the technical talent of the people on the ground
tends to work itself out
because the people at the top care enough to follow through
on ensuring that you have that.
They continue to find people
until they get the right technical talent.
Yeah, it's a rule of business
that A grade players higher
A grade players, but B grade players
higher C and D grade players.
That's right.
And so many of these things,
so at the IRS,
which is, to be blunt,
has had poor technical leadership
for roughly 40 years.
It's just this compounding issue.
So we, at the IRS,
the policy for a long time,
has been we don't do technical interviews. We just do resume review. So if you were to apply
and you just wrote the word Java on your resume, we will just assume that you know how to do this.
And so this is sort of a joke, but it's not really a joke. Somebody told me, they said,
historically, if you want to hire a good engineer, you have to hire five because you just don't
know what you're going to get. So if you need five engineers, you've got to put out a role,
you've got to put out 30 roles to find five or six good people. Because the hiring
process is not sufficiently
scrutinous. Yeah. And this, I'll give you
again, this is a thing that I'm dealing
with right now. Yeah. I'm loving the, I'm loving
the examples. It sounds
you know, it's sort of a very conceptual
and fluffy until you bring it into land
with real stories. Totally. And this is the
benefit of just being in
the weeds trying to solve these problems.
Cold face. Yeah. The
specific thing I'm working through
right now is
we're in the
process of
recomposing the engineering org in the IRS, which is we have too many people within the engineering
function who are not engineers. And where they end up, I think it's going to be in chief
operating officer, some of them in product and design. It doesn't really matter. But I have a,
I have a memo that I'm still drafting that I'm probably going to publish at some point. The memo
is titled, Engineering is for Engineers.
And it argues that if you're in engineering, you should be an engineer.
And if you are not an engineer, you should not be in engineering.
Anyone from the private sector would view that as a totology, because why would you ever have somebody who's not an engineer in engineering?
But in government, this is going to be very controversial because most people in these roles are not engineers.
So the goal is
Let's find who our engineers are
Let's move the people who are not
Into some other function
And then we're going to bring in more engineers
I think we currently have
A hundred engineering roles open right now
At the IRS
Which if anyone listening wants to apply
That's a USA Jobs
That's the website
We have a hundred roles open
The challenge, though, and I'll just walk you through the process why this is such a problem.
At the IRS, we have six job openings, right?
And as a point of comparison, if you wanted to hire somebody, you would write up the job description.
This is what you do.
You post it.
You interview those people.
You decide if you want them.
You hire them or you don't hire them.
It's not like that here.
So let's say you want an engineer who specifically does this one thing.
Well, you send it to the HR team.
They decide if it matches one of the existing, they call them PDs position descriptions, I think.
If it matches one of the existing approved PDs, which in the case of our current hiring pipeline, many of them did not.
And so they ended up getting posted with some fairly generic thing.
but by the time you've written the position description,
the engineers are no longer in the loop on this process.
So it gets handed off to a mid-level person in HR.
They decide if your job description is accurate or not.
They then post it.
You get a bunch of people apply.
The mid-level in HR decides whether that person is qualified.
The engineer is not in this loop at all, by the way.
Yeah, the HR person does not have technical capability.
They can't assess whether or not this person.
and can actually write in Java or whatever?
They just look at a resume.
They make the determination.
Is this person qualified for this role?
And then eventually this person, the engineer,
will finally get like a packet of PDFs to review.
It's like, here's 10 people that we think are qualified for this role.
And they don't get to see the people coming into the pipeline.
They don't get any of the stuff.
I'm currently in the process of trying to figure out,
is this a law that says,
that the engineers are not allowed in this process?
Is it just fiefdom building where somebody is trying to just exclude them so that they have a role that can't be disintermediated?
How do we get the people who are the hiring manager, the engineers, the engineering leaders who need more engineers, how do we get them back in the process of actually hiring our engineers?
I'm actively working on this right now.
I'm working with the Office of Personnel Management to try to figure out what the issue is there.
I'm working with IRSHR to try to figure out what the issue is there.
And this kind of ties into the other set of problems that I've found.
One thing that is fairly unique about what's happening right now is the amount of collaboration between agencies is probably the highest it's ever been.
So when you have an issue with the Office of Personnel Management, I can just call and I know legal counsel there and I can call them and I can say this is what we're seeing.
Is this an OPM policy or not?
He'll look into it.
He'll get back to me.
Usually these things are done in such information silos that that sort of collaboration never happens.
The people at OPM might say, oh, it's not my problem.
That's a treasury problem.
So they'll just ignore it.
But there's a level of collaboration and mission orientation to get these problem solves.
That's probably the biggest difference from what we're saying now, from what's been the case in the past, that I think really is leading to a lot of these changes.
Doge became famous for hiring young people.
Yeah. Infants, some are accused.
Why is the federal government behind the private sector typically when it comes to hiring young people?
Yeah, I think the biggest reason is.
is there were actually some quite successful programs.
There's one called Pathways.
I think it was maybe before Pathways,
but there was a program that used to exist
where you could recruit people out of colleges.
And there was an internship program.
But this actually maybe ties into what we were talking about before
of like so many of these things are just unforced errors
where we used to have this internship program.
We'd get people out of college or grad school.
They would be in the job.
They'd see if they like it.
And then we'd want to hire them.
And then we could hire them.
That worked.
This was like early 2010s.
Then there was a change that said, well, you can't just hire them because that, I believe it has something to do with like they thought it violated something around veterans preference or something.
There was some reason why they didn't want you to just be able to hire people.
normally anymore through that.
So they had to go through a competitive process, finger quotes, right, which is the one
that I basically just described before.
And so it was often, and some of the people who have been there for a long time told me,
it was usually the case that those interns who are actually really good, who they really
wanted, would not be the ones that could be selected because they were deemed unqualified or
they were deemed insufficiently experienced, or they did not have enough of a veteran's preference
to make it to the top of the stack. A lot of the hiring processes that we have are they,
for a lot of these roles, you are specifically instructed to hire the minimally qualified candidate,
which means you are instructed to hire effectively the first person,
who meets the minimum threshold.
Okay.
That sounds like it would be quick, though.
It is quick.
All right.
It's quick if you don't care who you get.
Right, but it's quick to get people in who are often underqualified and not fit for purpose and slow to get them out.
Yes.
Effectively impossible to get them out.
So you hire quickly, fire slowly.
Yeah.
Or never.
Fire never.
Yeah.
You can hire slowly.
There are different hiring authorities.
There are some roles where you have something called direct.
higher authority, which just allows you to pick the people who you want for specific
roles. There's a very limited number of roles that have direct higher authority. Most of these
are in this competitive process. And the competitive process often means that you will end up
with candidates that are not the ones that you want. You are painting a picture that is almost
exactly what I thought it was going to be. As a immigrant foreigner who doesn't really pay much
tension or care about what goes on inside of the US government, this is precisely what I thought
it would be. It is ossified, right? It's big, it's inefficient, and I have to assume that it is
causing even well-meaning people who really want to try and make change to sort of regress
back to the mean of government. So even the high agents,
see, you know, upwardly mobile, talented people that want to drive things forward,
learn over time that their efforts are kind of wasted.
And actually, when they do try and move things forward, they rock the boat so much.
They're probably disincentivized from doing that too.
So change is highly, highly push back against.
Yeah.
And I would say there's the call it 100 or 200 people that I've really come to rely on.
at the IRS out of 12,000 13,000 including contractors yeah um they're they're really quite good
and I uh I've had conversations with them about like why are you still here because if I was in
their position I don't think I would have lasted three months and every one of them has said like
Oh, believe me. I've thought about leaving. But several of them have said, I just, I care enough about the mission. I recognize that if I left, very bad things would happen. And they have the sense of responsibility. And that's why they're still here. And I really admire that. And I'm glad that they're still there. I would not be able to do this if they weren't there. What's the federal government missing that the private sector isn't? Is it competition, incentives, accounting.
I think there's one thing that it is always missing and will always miss, and this is just a, I would describe it as an assumption that you have to make when you're thinking about designing any system. And it's kind of how we got here to begin with, which is there is no feedback loop when it's the government. It's kind of like why FDR was so opposed to public sector unions is because in the private sector, you can unionize, but if you demand, you
too much from the company. Eventually the company will just die. But the government won't. You can
just demand more. You can just work less. There is no counterbalance to the unions in the public
sector. You can just always say yes and nothing happens. The debt just gets larger. The amount of
money just goes out. And there is no force that pushes against it. So the assumption that you always
have to make. And why we end up with so many of these rules around personnel, around contracts,
is that there is no natural incentive structure that prevents government from doing bad things.
I think it doesn't surprise me that this is the sort of challenge that people are facing.
But also, only 16% of Americans trust the federal government.
that was some Pew study from
2023, I think.
Is that surprising to you
given that you, what you've
seen from the inside? I don't know what trusting the government
means, but you would
trust somebody to
look after your dog.
Okay, so what are the things that they need?
Where they need to be driven, they need to be competent,
they need to be conscientious and aware,
they need to have the skill set
that's required to be able to look after a dog.
They need to not be malicious against
dogs. So there's, you know, the fraud, waste, abuse, like, inside a threat, all of those
things. There's a number of different levels that you need to get through in order to be able to
think, I trust this person. And not all of them are malicious and not all of them are
competence based. But 16% of Americans trust the federal government. Doesn't seem
surprising. Yeah. I think it's generally good for people to be skeptical of the government. It is
the entity with a monopoly on violence.
That is a thing that one should inherently be skeptical of.
I do wonder how much of that is just
an over-exposure to the news.
I think that's a there are a lot of things that are either completely not real
that people believe are true.
or they are sufficiently
non-representative of reality
that they are effectively not real
and
if you go way back,
people cared a lot more,
I'm sure you know all this stuff,
people cared a lot more about
their local community.
There was no 24-7 national news coverage.
But over time,
it's basically become a team sport.
And people watch it like they're watching football.
And these
these things that have always happened
sort of on the edges of the government
are now front and center
and they look like
they are representative of reality
when they're not.
So I don't really know.
It's been interesting to observe from the inside
how the tail can wag the dog
in a lot of these things.
Like a specific example is
at the IRS, we hosted for the first time ever
we took 50 of our best engineers
who have been there, many for 10, 15 years
across all.
the different teams. We brought them together for a strategic planning session at Treasury
to discuss across all these teams, which rarely talk to each other. What are you seeing? How do we
land the plane on this modernization program? It was incredibly useful. People were finding
data sources that we didn't even know about. We were finding all kinds of issues,
problems that were just a coordination problem that have been stuck for years got resolved on the spot
because people could just talk to each other because historically when you have this many layers
for an engineer to talk to another engineer they've got to tell their supervisor who tells
their director who tells the subject matter expert who goes across to the other team and then it's got
it goes through like eight layers of filtering none of whom know anything about this topic you can't
just slack them you can't just like communicate with them what is
communication. What's the platform that you guys use? Teams, typically, or email.
Microsoft Teams and email? I haven't used Teams apart from... It's very similar to Slack.
Okay, right. How many people are in your team's?
That's a good question. I don't know if I have any actual direct reports. I've just sort of co-opted a bunch of other teams.
You're floating in there. You're like a mercenary. Basically.
Yeah, free loader.
So there's this communication gaps that are a huge problem.
We hosted an event of strategic planning.
Wired magazine put out a piece that says that we hosted a hackathon, that Doge.
Oh, this was what that was.
Yeah.
Doge, they said Doge hosted a hackathon with a bunch of Doge people.
What's a hackathon for the people that aren't familiar?
Well, so typically it's like you do 48 hours of a bunch of coding and you have some deliverable at the end.
And what's...
Navy SEAL Hell Week for...
Yeah.
For software developers, yeah.
And what's weird about it is they requested like, hey, we heard you guys are hosting a hackathon.
And we said, no, most of these people didn't even have their computers open.
This is a strategic planning session with 50 career IRS engineers to talk about IRS modernization.
And they invented the story out of whole cloth that it's a Doge hackathon.
It's completely made up.
And this is sort of the tail wagging the dog thing where I still get requests from Congress asking about this hackathon.
Would that be a bad thing if you had hosted a hackathon?
I'm not even sure it would be.
But like, none of this is real.
What do you think is the subtext is the subtext of the hackathon, this is Silicon Valley degeneracy, caffeine-fueled, Adderall addicted, young people eating in their Chick-fil-A and.
coding up the matrix.
I think what this story intentionally implied, which is not real, but what they want people
to think is that the young Doge engineers are hacking around with taxpayer data and we're
doing something nefarious.
Yeah, I suppose the word hackathon.
It's not got great optics.
Yeah.
They're using these words intentionally and they suggest certain things that you ever read Ryan
Holidays book,
Trust me, I'm lying.
He has this great concept
called trading up the chain,
which is about how you start
with something that's like a half
truth that you suggest,
which then, like,
it started out,
I think it's even in that article.
They say that I am SpaceX affiliated
because my brother interned there
many years ago.
And then if you look at a lot
of news stories today,
they say, Sam Corkos,
SpaceX engineer.
I have never worked to SpaceX.
Right.
The closest affiliation I have is that my brother interned there.
Like, I have nothing to do with SpaceX at all.
But they just like, they imply something, which suggests something, which then just becomes reality.
And then all of these news stories start to say that.
It's like a slippery, Motten Bailey type thing.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's just, it becomes the new narrative.
And they just build on top of it.
So how big of a deal was trying to deal with this hackathon story?
Was that a huge pain in the ass?
It was a huge pain in the ass.
ass yeah because like people kept asking what this is the tail wagging the dog thing right
I started getting emails from IRS engineer saying hey can I join the next hackathon
it's like guys there is no hackathon there was never a plan to do a hackathon none of this is real
and it's just like I have enough to do already I don't need to be you know pushing back that is
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right in the face
yeah
you thought you could hide
back there didn't you
no no no
I see you man
obviously a lot of people
associate
Doge with Elon
Elon left recently
yeah
how big of an impact
well actually
even before that
how much of a driving force
was Elon in Doge
in the stuff
that I was doing
not a lot
I had very little interaction with him
the
we primarily worked
with the secretary's team
and within our agency
I think the biggest effect
was
there was a more
how would I describe it
I think the biggest impact was
When there was the initial blow up, there was a week of real uncertainty on what it all meant.
But over time, the teams had already been so embedded with the agencies and the departments.
And since we really take our instructions from them, it didn't have that much of an impact.
I think some of the impact is that the interagency communication weakened a little bit, just because there's less.
of a central connecting force for these things.
But for the stuff that I do, it has not had a particularly large impact.
I imagine that in some other teams where they really needed Elon to push something from the top, that probably was more impactful.
But I think it's very possible that part of the reason why it hasn't impacted us at Treasury that much is that Secretary Besson is able to get a lot of these things done himself.
Right.
So you don't need that big hammer, that big.
Elon-shaped hammer
coming in to fix things.
I guess.
I guess
Doge has kind of taken on
a meme
all of its own.
What do you wish
more people knew
about what Doge is
as
a movement
as an organization?
I don't know what you call it.
An entity
of loosely collected
fucking group of morals?
Yeah. It's like a loosely connected group of mission-oriented people who want to fix a lot of the things that are broken in our government and stop the ever-growing national debt from collapsing the country. That's probably the main driving force that we all share and why we joined. Why we joined the government is to get this solved.
I would say the, the biggest thing is that these are some very smart people, some very high agency people.
That's something that I've, it's a word that I've taken to using a lot more.
I didn't, in the private sector, so many people are high agency that it's never been a thing that I've thought.
Don't need to select for it.
Yeah.
But in government, there are certain people that I have come.
to rely on. And when I say I rely on them, they are the people where when I say that this is
important and I need somebody to do it, they will actually do it. And far fewer people will do that
than you would expect. The number of people where you say, hey, I need this by Thursday. Thursday
happens. And you're like, hey, did you do that thing? Oh, yeah, I'm on it. I'll do it right now.
Next week goes by. Hey, did you do that thing? Oh, yeah, yeah, I'll get right on it. And it's just, I don't know
if it's malice
I don't know if it's incompetence
I don't know what it is
it might just be the fact that they know
that they can't get fired
I have no idea
I don't know genuinely for a lot of these people
why I cannot seem to get any deliverables out of them
but once you find the people
who can actually deliver
you've got to hold on to them for dear life
those websites say that you've saved
$200 billion or so
maybe yeah I've heard a lot of people say
that's not accurate. What's the truth there? Well, so this is a long and nuanced conversation
about how you calculate savings. So I've actually had many internal debates on how we calculate
this stuff. So the way that we've been tracking it is the most common type of contract is a firm
fixed price or basically just like think of it as a normal contract. We're going to buy this thing from
you for this amount of money.
There's several other types of contracts, BPAs, which is a blanket purchase agreement.
There's an ID, IQ, indefinite duration, indefinite quantity.
The way that savings are generally calculated is when you have a contract, let's say you're
my contractor, I'm going to pay you a million dollars to do this thing.
If I have already paid you 500,000 of that, and then I cancel the remainder of the
contract, then we will book that $500,000 as a saving.
The problem is that doesn't fully capture the amount of savings because that contract probably
would have been auto renewed.
The other challenge is for like a blanket purchase agreement.
It's really more like a credit card limit.
And ID IQ is basically the same thing.
They send it to be for different stuff.
So these BPAs can be very large.
I think there were some IDIQs that are like a trillion dollars for something like nine millimeter ammunition for the military.
It's basically just saying if you need it, just buy it.
Like just this is who you buy it from.
There's how much of cost.
Just buy however much you need.
A blanket purchase agreement says like you can buy up to $100 million of services from this company.
And it's fairly open ended.
The challenge comes down to how do you decide what a savings is?
If you have a $2 billion blanket purchase agreement and you cancel it, how much do you book as a saving?
Well, we've tried to do some math of like, well, all right, how much was the average spend on that BPA over the last five years?
And however much we haven't spent so far this year, we can book the remainder of that as a savings.
But the data quality in the government is so poor that it is effectively impossible to do that.
and so when you're trying to figure out
how you use this calculation
how much are you actually saving
it's really hard
and I can even give you a specific example
at the IRS right
so
one of the first things that I did
at the IRS is I said
hey all right
we've been brought in
to do contract review
and to look at our budget
what is our budget
I heard
22 and a half billion
I heard 10.8 billion
I heard 12 billion
he's like guys
what is our budget
how is it possible
that I cannot get a straight answer to this question
it took six weeks
for me to get a clear answer
to what our budget even is
part of the reason
is because of these
continuing resolutions
where I think at that point
we still didn't even have
a 2025 budget defined
or something like that
this is all kind of outside
of my wheelhouse
part of it is the fact
that a lot of the money
from the IRS
came from the inflation reduction act
which was, had $80 billion that was given to the IRS specifically.
And so accounting for that was very challenging.
So we eventually figured it out.
It was something like $22.5 billion if you include an inflation reduction act money.
Great.
My scope was in IT.
How much of that is IAT?
I think it was $10.8 billion for FY2025.
So then we worked from that and we said, all right, what are we spending on now?
Which things do we count?
which things don't we count. I think we would conservatively say that we've saved $2 billion
in contract cancellations. It's roughly correct. The reason why I say as conservative is I think
we're on track to spend something like $4.5 billion. And our budget was $10.8 billion within IT.
And so you would naturally say, wouldn't that mean you saved $6 billion? But when you count
savings, you don't count canceled solicitations. You only count the way that is currently calculated.
You only count money where a contract was signed, but the money had not yet been sent,
which is like this very narrow window of contracts. So for all of the things that we said,
no, we're not spending $400 million on that. No, we're not spending a half a billion on that.
That doesn't even show up. And so this is one of those tricky determinations of what is saved.
Is it one-time savings?
Is it annual savings?
The Inflation Reduction Act money has a time duration.
It isn't an indefinite amount of money.
It's for some set number of years.
So how much of that do you count?
Because you couldn't count it as annual because it's not permanently recurring.
It's only recurring for a certain number of years.
So all of us to say, it's a lot more complicated.
And so when there are these journalists who say, well, we did our math and it only saved X.
It fundamentally misunderstands what savings even means.
they're using some of their own calculations
to try to come up with like
the most conservative
least accurate version
of how much was saved
and so I think my opinion on this
and I know people are still going back and forth on this
is really
the amount of money you saved
is however much you are planning to spend
minus how much you actually spent
but you're not going to know that until the end of the year
because these things get reconciled at the end of the year
Well, you're certainly not going to know it if the budget's never actually defined.
Yeah.
How do you know that you're not cutting stuff that's important?
If the priority is we need to have cutbacks, presumably one of the huge concerns is cutting shit that you actually needed.
Yeah, I mean, in some organizations, they are higher risk than others.
In some organizations, you can cut things that are important and just put it right back.
And nobody even knows.
That's not the case for the IRS.
That's not the case for something like the SEC.
If you mess something up, it can have significant market moving effects.
Like when I was talking to the team about some of the changes we wanted to make it at the IRS, the, we were calculating the cost of like really bad decisions.
If we like totally blew something up, the amount of money that we could cost the American public would far outstrip any of the savings we could make in Doge.
just because we collect you have to be gentle you have to be very thoughtful it's a scalpel it's not a
chainsaw and so we went through really diligently line by line on every one of these what is it for
what does it do what is the risk and a lot of the people as I mentioned before especially the
initial leadership team just said everything is critical everything you can't cut anything
in fact we need more nothing can be cut and we need more and when we swap them out for people
who were more in the weeds
who knew what these things were.
We found actually quite a lot
that we could cut.
And it's not just cutting.
It's really this reallocation.
There's this historic problem
that we have where we assume
the vendors are going to save us
and we just keep repeating the same cycle,
which is we give vendor X
a billion dollars
to finally modernize this thing.
It's now years,
it's years behind schedule.
It's all just gone up and smoke.
And we say, oh, wow, that was bad.
maybe this other vendor will fix it
and then we do that for five years
and then they just blow it up and smoke
and we just keep repeating that cycle over
and over again. Why is it important
to cut spending in the government?
Well, the most
tactical reason is that
if you run out of money,
bad things happen.
The amount of leverage
on that is pretty
significant, especially if you can do
this across all of the departments.
I think the other
The other thing that we've observed just specifically within the IRS is that by spending less money, the organization is running much better because we have fewer of these competing vendors who are building totally disparate systems that don't communicate with each other.
This kind of ties back to the earlier incentive problem we discuss, which is if you're a vendor, your incentive is to lock in.
you want to create a custom something and you want to make sure that we can only you know how to
work it and we see i see the archaeological evidence of that everywhere in the irs like the
the compliance team told me early on they really need help with their software systems they said
we have at least 60 different systems that do not communicate with each other at all i assume this
was an exaggeration i spent two full days now at the compliance facility
just watching how these systems work.
They are, if anything, they're under,
they're underestimating how many of these systems there are.
In software, when you're building these types of systems,
one of the just core principles is you want to have a single source of truth
for any piece of data.
This is foundational.
Sometimes you might have two sources of truth
if you're doing like a really messy migration or you have some caching layer and you're
kind of balancing those two. But really one is the goal. As of last count, which you think is
last week, the IRS has about 108 competing sources of truth. I'm not talking about data
sources. This is like the most complex Rube Goldberg I've ever seen in my life. It's just
these systems don't communicate with each other. So there are
some specific examples that the customer service team showed me, where if you want to know what
somebody's current address is, you have to check a whole bunch of different places,
and they just have to use some judgment on which of these is actually the current address
because there are so many different places where we store this information that don't connect
to each other. So this is our foundational number one priority is data quality.
It's just we need to get to the point where all of our systems are using the same
information under the hood. We just lose stuff. We have all these data integrity problems.
This should have been a thing that we did 20 years ago, but we're finally prioritizing it now.
If Doge is saving billions, because you're one cog in a big Dogey wheel, if Doge is saving billions,
how come Americans aren't feeling these savings in their everyday lives?
I mean, the tax rate's the same.
So I don't really know.
It's if the Doge dividend does eventually happen, they will see something from that.
But I don't know the status of that.
That's not really in my wheelhouse.
I think my hope is that if we are successful specifically in what I'm focused on at the IRS,
that when you call the IRS, somebody will answer.
you can go to the internet to solve problems.
One of the big priorities that we have is digital correspondence.
This is something where right now, when you get a letter in the mail from the IRS,
oftentimes we don't, you can't just go to the internet and like see that letter.
The only evidence that you got it is the piece of paper.
And then to respond to it, you either need to fax it to us or you need to send it by certified mail.
and then we may or may not receive it
and you have no
the feedback loop is like months
and so this whole thing
it's just such a mess
and so one of the big focuses
right now is
you still get a letter in the mail
and it says
go to IRS.gov to respond
you can go to the internet
you can log in
you can see the message
you can respond to it
you can upload documents
on the internet
this is basic stuff
we don't currently have this
So instead of that, what we have today is the call to actions, give us a call.
You sit on hold for some number of hours.
And then they say, great, yeah, we need some more documents.
Can you fax them to us?
It's like this whole thing is such a mess.
And so I think if we're successful, a lot of those things will start to feel like the government is able to solve basic problems.
Is there a fear that modernization or updating is just code for,
breaking stuff that already works, but imperfectly.
So I have one of the other CIO memos that I'm writing is about why we need to stop doing
modernization, just as a concept, because I think it stems from a general lack of understanding
of the software development process, this whole concept of like we need to modernize, we need to
throw a bunch of money one time at solving this problem and then never touch it again.
I've analogized this to some friends of mine who are not in the software development space
where if you have two ends of the spectrum, one end is like building a house where almost all
of the work goes up front. And then there's like this trickle of maintenance that comes
afterwards. On the other hand, it's like getting a puppy where there's some extra work
at the beginning during the puppy phase, but you can't just not feed the puppy for
like a year. You can do that for a house. You can just like forego maintenance and it's not just
going to immediately collapse. But software systems are effectively living systems that require
constant maintenance and updates where you get feedback from the people using it. And they say,
hey, this thing doesn't work. Can you fix it? And then you fix it. And they say, hey, what if this
thing was over here? What if it added this thing? What if it pulled in data from here? And you're
adding to it over time. Our current software development process in the IRS. And
this is another one of those things that I'm spending a lot of my time working with the team to try to reorient our thinking on this actively is normally we'll spend a billion dollars, five billion dollars, some number of billions of dollars one time on building a software tool. And then the explicit directive is never touch it again. It is now done. Now we only do new stuff. That is now a legacy product. Now we're going to build the new system to replace that old system. And then of course,
course, what you end up with is just two systems. And then you do this again. Now you have three
systems. And that's how you end up with 108. Yeah. Yeah. And it's just a total mess. And it's not the
way we should do this. So I think the question that you had of like is is modernization ultimately
even a good thing, I think is totally valid. And it's not one that gets asked enough. The question
about like mainframes are not strictly speaking bad. And the way that we define legacy,
we actually changed this a few months ago
but historically the definition of legacy
at the IRS is just
anything that's 25 years old or more
and if it's legacy
you've got to redo it
and we have
there are systems that are more than 25 years old
that are fine just leave them alone
in fact they're more than fine
they have been battle tested
I was going to say
fib stuck about for this long
we have a rule with my friends
that we always get excited
about new life hacks
this is the new you need to try
obsidian dude
the best new no
taking, whatever the, this new meditation app,
this is a way to make a toasted sandwich in a fucking toaster.
And if the person that's proposing it hasn't been using it for at least six months.
Yeah, totally.
It doesn't count because, yeah, you've got shiny object syndrome about this new toasted sandwich process.
But what you didn't account for is that after five toasted sandwiches, it breaks the toaster.
Yep, absolutely. Yeah. And it's absolutely true in this case.
Like, for some of these things, these mainframes are totally fine. In fact, they are maybe
the optimal solution for this problem. The thing that mainframes have been optimized for
for half a century is batch data processing. And you know what we do a lot of? Batch data processing.
It is maybe the perfect solution for that problem. The challenge is when you have other things
that you need to do where that gets in the way of it. And so for individual master file and for a lot
of the functionality we want at the IRS, the fact that it's based on a mainframe does cause
problems because there's a there's a latency and there's a delay in getting data because a lot of
these things you end up getting weekly batches and you can't have a weak delay on these things and
it's really hard it's when you have such complicated tax logic it's really hard to get data in
and out of the mainframe and so you have these issues where this is how we ended up with
what we often refer to it as shadow IT you have all these different IT orgs that have basically
created their own universe within IT that doesn't connect to anywhere else.
And so it's very hard to get that information to places where they need it.
Shadow IT is also, this is an interesting symptom of the type of dysfunction.
And I think this might also exist at very large corporations where because IT as a function
has failed to deliver for so long, each of these subcomponents like the compliance team,
the customer service team.
They have basically lost confidence that whenever they need something done, they can ask IT to do it.
So what they do is they create their own secret IT group with their own, with their own contract, with their own team.
And they build their own product that doesn't connect to the rest of the universe.
And then compliance does that over here.
And then automated underreporter does it over here.
And everyone ends up building their own shadow IT org.
And you can see how it happens.
because if you're responsible for delivering on something
and your counterparty cannot be relied on,
the only option you have is to do it yourself.
But then the cost of that is like hyper fragmentation,
which then causes all these other downstream problems.
And so figuring out how to make the IT org functional,
I think is front and center for all of these other problems we need to solve.
I want to talk about security.
You know, Doge has had a lot of,
criticisms. There's 300 million American citizens' bits of data that have been put up in the
cloud. This is contributed to by stories about hackathons, which have got scary names, and make
people think that it's being flippant with sensitive data and stuff like that.
Is there a risk that move, fast break things in the US government is a strategy that is too
dangerous to do. Basically, does speed really matter if it risks security?
I think that, so we're even in the current implementation, pretty far from moves fast and
break things. The almost all of the work is being done by people who have been there for
10 or 15 years. It's certainly moving faster than has been done historically, but the
bar is so low for how fast things have been done historically that making them go faster
is, I would say, pretty low risk. I think there's a lot of fear mongering about these things
about, you know, how this data is used. It's going to the cloud. It's already in the cloud.
It was in the cloud before we got here. Like a lot of these, a lot of these things come from
like a misunderstanding of what it is. Like there's a, I've had to answer many, many questions. We are
part of this fragmentation problem we have at the IRS of our data quality issue is we have
something like 15 different fragments of APIs. APIs are basically just how two computers
talk to each other. And we have all these different systems that don't communicate. And so we're
building a unified API. So there's a central place within the IRS where if you are building
an interface for one of the compliance teams, you can see the same data that
customer service seat. So when they're on the phone with that person, they can have a conversation
about the same piece of information. But because most people don't know what APIs are, there's
been a whole bunch of fearmongering articles saying they're building a mega API to do something.
It's like APIs are how computers communicate. Every company has API. They're using scary words
and I don't think they know what the words mean because if they did, they would just know this
is this is normal. This is, this is so normal. It's a complete non-story for any software
engineer. How secure were the systems when you first got in? Did you have any concerns
around security? It's very dependent on the organization. So, IRS, pretty good. Treasury,
pretty good. Some of the other agencies where they don't really think of IT as their core
competency. Not as good. I would say it definitely could use a higher priority. The core challenge
with a lot of this is that cybersecurity engineers are in very high demand and it is super hard
to attract senior cybersecurity leadership with a salary cap of. Yeah. There was a really famous
job listing. I think it was the UK head of cybersecurity.
And the annual salary was, I want to say about $65,000, so maybe about $85,000.
You're talking about a rounding error on countries that want to get access to our cybersecurity or people that just got Bitcoin at $100.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, there is, that is not a difficult amount of money for you to counterbalance if you want to try and turn somebody.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
And the core challenge there is I've been trying to recruit people to be in the chief information security officer role across a lot of these departments or agencies within Treasury.
And the challenge is that it's a massive pay cut.
The other thing is this ties back to people say, all right, great, you know, I've got, I've got 10 people on my team that I think would come with me and we can get this done.
It's like, oh, you can't do that.
And also, if you don't like the people on your team, there's nothing you can do about it.
And the, just the number of handcuffs that we put on them even when they get here.
The other thing that's, I would say, especially challenging within cyber for a lot of these agencies, especially the ones that need it, is the best way to destroy your career as a chief information security officer.
is to have a major cybersecurity breach under your watch.
The problem is, if this was the private sector and you came in, people care about reality.
So if you came in and you changed around the systems, you started observing things, maybe for the first time, and you discover, oh, the Russians are in our system.
And they've been in here for three years.
You would then immediately ring the alarm bells in your company and you would get them out and you would be praised as a hero for having.
found it and remove them. But because this is politics, what's going to happen is they're going to say, oh, it was under your watch that the Russians were in there. And you can say, well, what do you mean? They were in here before I got here. It doesn't matter because it's politics. That doesn't make the news story. It's like there was a massive cyber breach under such and such administration.
No, they discovered a massive cyber breach under such and such administration.
Yep. But that's not the tail waggs the dog here because that's not, that's not the news story.
So it's very challenging to convince them to be in this role because especially if they're coming into some of these smaller agencies who have had real challenges with this, you're rolling the dice on it.
In fact, if you are successful and you find these things and you stop them, you better hope you're like at your retirement age because it might be a lot harder for you to...
All right. That's the encore to your career.
What do you say to people who accuse Doge of being unvetted and unchecked?
I mean, they've said that about me.
Like, I have security clearance.
I've, like, gone through all the normal processes, as is everyone else.
So it's what they say.
I don't really know.
I think everyone has gone through the normal clearance processes.
They've gone through the background checks.
They've gone through all of the stuff that you would normally go through.
What about, I think, when they use the word unchecked, it means sort of unchecked in terms of remit.
internally able to enact change and make decisions higher, fire, spend, save, cut in a manner
that other people bypasses some of the Chesterton's fence that probably should have been
left there? I can really speak mostly just to treasury and IRS, because that's why I have
the most visibility. Pretty much anything that you want to get done, you have to go
through the career staff.
Like there is no, it's very challenging to like find the button to push because usually
by rule it's done by a different person.
And so there are definitely times when there are some normal set of clearances or steps that
you'd have to take that are not actually required, but they've just been done sort of by
ceremony or something like that and you can shortcut them.
But typically, at least in our case at Treasury, this is done with the Treasury leading
leadership team bought into this.
They say, like, you guys are responsible for looking over this, and then that's, that's
what we do.
So, uh, it's, it's very hard to fire people.
Um, the, the only way that you can really reduce the size of government is through
the reduction and force process, which is a big thing that the, the, the Doge team was
pushing for.
What is that?
So reduction in force is the, it's really the only mechanism historically.
to have like a sizable reduction in the number of people employed by the government.
Tech companies are doing riffs right now, a reduction force,
and the most common methodology you would use in a riff is you find who your low performers are,
or maybe your relative low performers, and then you cut them.
Unfortunately, in the government, it is almost the opposite of that,
because of all these extra rules
the people who stay are there based on tenure
and veterans preference
and so you're almost guaranteed
and this is to your early point
why do we have so few young people in the government
I think it's 7% are under 30
whereas in the private sector is more like 20
wow okay so it's way less
it's like a third of what you typically see
a big part of the reason for that
is when you do these reductions in force
it's basically tenure.
So it doesn't matter
who your top performers are.
It's effectively irrelevant to a RIF.
The only way you can do it is you take,
if you want to do a 20% RIF,
you take your 20% youngest people
who are often your top performers
and then you have to remove them.
And it is a really painful process.
And there's this whole thing.
You have to look for competitive areas.
You can do a 100% RIF of a competitive area.
It is this bizarre, cumbersome process, but kind of tying back to the steel man, which is you don't want riffs to be that easy if your goal is to retain civil service because you don't want new administration.
You don't want to revert back to the spoil system.
But I think most people would probably say that performance-based riffs is probably good.
instead of tenure-based, I think, I'm sure that's something people are pushing for, but that would make a really big impact.
Doge removed at least some non-zero number of government employees.
Talk to me about the process there and the fallout.
So some of that was through reduction in force, some of that was through DRP, which I think stands for deferred resignation program.
It's basically asking people to voluntarily resign for severance.
We had, I think, about 25,000 people at the IRS, take DRP out of, I think we had 110,000 when we started, something in that range.
In the IRS, we haven't seen that much fallout yet.
because really we had we had increased our staff to a historic levels.
I think the IRS historically has something like 80,000 staff,
and we had increased it well over 100,000 in the last administration.
So this isn't like a huge change compared to that.
I think the biggest thing that we're focused on primarily within IT is this recomposition.
And so trying to make sure that our technical staff is technical.
and the more we can do
to encourage the people
who are ostensibly engineers
but are not actually capable
of doing their jobs
to move to a different part of the organization
find a job elsewhere
I think that would be a net benefit
what are some of the errors
or biggest blunders that you think
doge made like if you could go back
and if you were king of doge
what would you go back and suggest
that they change? There are any sort of faceplant moments or real sort of unforced errors that you wish
hadn't happened? I know of some secondhand of like specific things that were done that upset some
people that were just unnecessary. But I really think the biggest one fundamentally is that at a certain
stage, we really should have brought in more people into the conversation. There became this media
narrative. Them and us. Yeah, them and us. And like, don't.
does just doing these nefarious things.
But anytime I would bring somebody in and say, all right, these are my priorities.
They're like, whoa, that's amazing.
Like, these are, these are all of the things that we want done.
I didn't realize that you were involved in making that happen.
But there was a degree of secrecy that I don't think was useful.
Yeah, I mean, it just plays into bad optics.
Yeah.
Right.
That, yeah, it is young ADHD.
you know, super intelligent infants coming in and vibe coding their way through very precarious
government systems. And it plays into a broader narrative that's kind of a skepticism about
the rich at the moment. I was having a conversation with George Mack yesterday and we were
talking about how Elon, for all that people have huge criticisms about him, he continues to deliver
largely and his most recent one trillion dollar compensation package thing sounds absurd and obviously
is but is basically predicated on him reaching another stretch goal that is so insane you know it's
autonomous robots in every home within this time and it's 10xing the value of Tesla and it's this
and this and this and this and you think well if the guy does it then that's that's fine and you know
I think a lot of criticisms can be hidden rightly if a lot of concerns around someone can be hidden
rightly if that person continues to deliver, which is why if Kanye drops a new slamming
album, people will probably still listen to it. And in this very bizarre way, even though this
shouldn't be the way it is, he's redeemed for transgressions of the past simply because
he's good at the thing that he's supposed to do. It's like kind of just a bias that he's
of God in this way. So, you know, there's this broader narrative at the moment. Peter Thiel,
I think, has maybe taken the new mantle of kind of like tech oligarch billionaire man that is
the scary lizard person accusation type thing. Mark Andreessen's in there, but he's not a big
enough name. If when you say this person, the person that you're explaining this to goes,
who? That doesn't work. And if you're not sufficiently VC-pilled, you don't know who. You don't
know who Andresen or Naval or whatever these people are. My point being, there is this
broader narrative at the moment that's kind of like the tech billionaire critique 3.0. You know,
you sort of had the first wave and then you had kind of Zuckerberg, but he's had a rebrand. He's
got curly hair and an oversized t-shirt now. So he kind of doesn't really work. And like,
what's he really do? He just spends loads of money on Apple engineers and steals them. Like, we don't
really understand that. And then, well, like, Bezos is just kind of like in his Connor McGregor arc now,
it seems, you know, he's just got a hot new wife and a wedding in Tuscany and he spends all
his time on a yacht and like, and I like Amazon, like even though it's kind of, you know,
a bit dodgy and stuff. And Bill Gates, you know, like, fucking, let's even do. Like, we're not
really too sure. Like, so I think we've left that world behind and now we've got this new one.
And the protection that, at least as far as I can see, Elon has, had and has, is he keeps
delivering on stuff. Like lots of people like Tesla's. They're the best electric car as far as I can
see. And he keeps on doing stuff that kind of is good for the planet, at least in some pocket.
Lots of blast radius of this stuff that I'm super uneducated about. But there is an argument to
be made that his push for EV has done an awful lot to improve climate change, even as people
sort of throw the usual accusations of blah, blah, blah, blah. My point being, if this is the world
that you're coming into, the optics of we welcome the input of people that exist here
already, we will stick by the rules of decorum to some degree. And I understand that if you
come from the world of business, I don't have a uniform that's required for the guys that work
for me. I want them to be comfortable and to just maximize the way that they operate. And they
understand. Like, if they're going to turn up on set, they're not going to be in their pajamas, right? But
largely, that doesn't really matter.
when you get to government, there is a sense of sort of pomp and circumstance that kind of people need to, the hallowed halls of that run this great nation, et cetera, et cetera.
And I think that these two worlds clashing, this sort of skepticism around move, fast, break things, tech oligarch, billionaire, oh, tendrils going into, this is part of a tech-enabled shadow government run by adult infants on stimulants with, we need to.
there are checks, balances, rules, and procedures that exist for a reason,
like Chesterton's fence at scale, right, a governmental scale.
And I think that, at least from as far as I can see,
the optics game has not been played as well as it could have done by Doge.
And what that's resulted in is people that say, like an Elon approach,
like don't look at what I say or what other people say about what I do,
look at the outcomes that I get
but unfortunately
politics what is it like
politics is different yeah so politics is an optics game
and what is it some insane percentage
of Congress
people's time is spent fundraising
and going to dinners and lobbying it's like
more than 50% or maybe even like 75%
of their time isn't doing the thing
it's doing the thing
that enables people to pay them to do the thing or support
the thing or whatever the bullshit is
and um yeah
I get how we just need to focus on.
This is a big fucking mess.
This is a big octopus.
A Gordian knot and I just need to take a scalpel to it, a flaming scalpel and slide through the middle of it.
But yeah, at least my total, you know, bro science off the reservation perception of what's gone on,
at least that contributed to it in a pretty significant way.
I think the optics have been quite poor.
and you think, am I more concerned with how I look or what I do?
I only have so many hours in the day and so many resources that I can deploy.
Why should I put it?
Just, you know, if you could run it back, I'd be like,
hey, let's have a director of Doge communications and brand
and have like a little team of people that go,
maybe we don't say that.
Maybe we shouldn't tweet that.
Maybe big balls.
Maybe that's not, you know, can we scrape that from the internet somehow?
Like, is that a way that we can, you know what I mean?
Yeah, I think the.
The interesting thing, having spent obviously a lot of time with these, the young Doge engineers, including big balls.
Including big balls.
Yeah.
These are extremely smart people.
I think this is the perception of these.
I've seen some people, some politicians call them infants as well.
And it's interesting because the founding fathers were roughly the same age when they wrote the Constitution and led the revolution.
against the British.
What age?
In their early 20s, typically, early to mid-20s.
These are not children.
These are adults who are very capable people.
I think they might be perceived as infants because our governing class is typically in their 70s and 80s.
So to them, it seems like they're infants.
But they're generally very thoughtful people who are challenging.
a lot of the institutions and systems that have been calcifying over many, many, many decades.
And that can be uncomfortable.
And one of the things that we often will push on for people is, if we go back to some of these examples, like the hiring process that I described, it's like, where does it say in the law that this is what we have to do?
And it usually doesn't.
But everyone sort of thinks that it does.
Same with like the fax machine thing.
Where in the law does it say we have to do faxes? And nobody can find it because it probably isn't. It probably isn't actually a law. It's just many, many, many decades of inertia that has been built up that requires somebody to challenge it.
I can't imagine that being associated with Doge in D.C. gets you a particularly warm welcome.
You know, it's an interesting, I haven't had any issues. Even like within the.
IRS. I really, I've had a couple circumstances with my first interaction. They react in a sort of
frightened way because of everything they've heard, you know, the hackathons, the all this stuff.
And then usually pretty quickly they realize that none of that stuff is actually real and that
our goals are largely the same on how to solve these problems. Yeah, it's just, it's been,
it is interesting to see how different perception can be from reality when you're in government.
Was there actually a challenge in moving Doge from being a meme to, a meme about a problem to actually solving a problem?
Or was it solutions first sort of from the beginning as far as you could see?
That's, I think, a meta question that's like outside of what I've been working on.
I think in my particular case, like we were told, look at these contracts.
tracks figure out for me personally why is this modernization program so bad how do we fix this
how do we land the plane before the end of this administration and so uh when you go in and you talk
to people a lot of the people especially an engineer the engineers on the team they want to
solve this problem they don't feel good about the fact that this thing has been ongoing for 35 years
and will probably never get done like they actually want to solve these problems did they see
Because I think from the outside, what a lot of people will assume about Doge is that you guys have come in and are at odds, at loggerheads.
There is this small pocket of people drinking new tonic in the fucking corner of the office, the new bit that they're allowed into.
And they are in conflict with the rest of government.
How much from your vantage point, and then I guess anyone else is outside of the Treasury too,
how much of has that been wow this is enabling and this is good versus this is threatening and can you
fuck off please i think it very much depends on the agency have you heard of any that are particularly
cantankerous oh yeah for sure do you can you say i think the ones that know deep down that their
entity serves no purpose and they know that if we found out what was going on we would seek to
eliminate it. Those are the ones who are particularly...
The second clock.
Yeah.
Like they know, from what I understand, I was not here when the USAID thing happened, but from the people I've talked to on the ground who were actually looking into it, there was no intention to shut down USAID when it started.
They just knew that there was a bunch of problems.
They knew, which is better grammar.
They just knew there were a bunch of problems.
And they came in, they started talking to people, they started looking at the books.
And then over time, they realized this whole thing is a.
a giant ball of worms.
They first came in saying, like, all right, what do we cut?
What do we retain?
How do we fix this?
And very quickly, they realized, like, this whole organization is a problem.
And they've seen that at a few other agencies as well, where I'm, this is kind of obvious,
but it's very different in my experience at the IRS.
The IRS serves a very obvious purpose.
And so there was never a question of like, do we just blow the whole thing up or not?
Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I understand. Okay. What does the IRS actually do?
Yeah. Well, so this is an interesting misconception. So the IRS, functionally, it's basically a software company. Almost everything we do involves a lot of software.
Very little of what we do actually involves collecting taxes. The Bureau of the Fiscal Service collects most of the taxes. The best way to think about,
it is BFS, Bureau of the Fiscal Service, is more like Stripe. They collect, they do payments.
The IRS is more like QuickBooks. It says it all that you're having to use.
Yeah. Yeah. Like we don't, we don't, we don't, we do, we do very little in terms of a big ledger.
It's a big ledger. Yeah. And we check to make sure that the amount of money that you say that you made is the same as the amount that we know you made.
And if those numbers are different, then we send you a strongly worded letter.
And if they continue to be different for very much longer than that, then there's an enforcement action taken against that person.
Are you guys in charge of the enforcement thing too?
Yes, to an extent.
We have a criminal investigations group.
There's a whole compliance team.
The compliance team is quite large.
I don't actually know at what point like DOJ maybe gets involved, but there's a pretty significant compliance arm.
It's one of the major functions of the IRS.
How does the IRS stack up against other parts of the government in terms of efficiency and efficacy?
Does it do what it says it can do?
And how easily does it do that thing?
So some of the things that it does very well are things like compliance because there's so much leverage in it.
There's effectively an infinite amount of money to make sure that we are collecting the proper amount of taxes.
We have some very sophisticated teams and people.
Part of the reason why I think we do is also that if you are interested in solving these kinds of problems,
there's really only one place that you get like $5 trillion worth of leverage on this stuff.
So for like a really good data scientist, this is a really, really interesting problem.
People will take a pay cut to work on this kind of problem because it's very, very interesting.
Where we struggle is in a lot of the software systems on, especially with customer service, individual online accounts, a lot of that taxpayer-facing stuff has just generally not been very good.
Are you in charge of corporate tax, too, or just individuals?
Yeah, all taxes.
Wow.
This is huge.
So you guys, I mean, the obvious challenge, the obvious interesting thing here,
is, I think. Many commentators online, many political parties run on increasing or reducing
taxes. Tax is a massive part of a lot of different political messaging and also the sort of thrust
of on the ground activists. At some point, that needs to come into contact with reality.
So we want to raise taxes for the most wealthy people
We want to cut taxes for the middle class
We want to streamline the tax system
And just have a flat tax
And cut out
fucking 95% of the people that have to work for you
Because it's all super super simple
Yeah
But at some point
That has to be enforced
So you can have all the policy that you want
And then it arrives presumably at your desk
Or one of the guys in your very small cohort
Of C level people's desks
And they go
this is what's happening with tax rates change the code on the ledger so that we know that that's
happening so just dig into the specifics of tax policy the talking points that people get to
play around with when that meets the road yeah i can actually give a very specific and timely example
so in the one big beautiful bill which is typically referred to as ob3 internally when
OB3 was passed, it has a bunch of changes to the tax law. The first step is it has to go to
the Office of Tax Policy and a bunch of other lawyers to interpret what it means and how it will
actually work in practice. So there's this whole step of the lawyers have to say, all right,
what is no tax on tips? What does that mean? How does that impact these? The thing that's
really interesting about a lot of the stuff that IT does is that a lot of what we do,
The first 80% of the work is usually pretty easy.
It's that second 80%.
Everything gets very challenging.
It's those edge cases.
Like, there's sort of an internal asterisk to everything,
which is like, this is all fine, but what about the Amish?
It's like, well, they're not going to send it on computers.
So we have to have some backup for that.
And it's like they're more of like a placeholder for all of the edge cases that you have to be aware of.
for people. Everyone, it needs to be, I'm reminded of a friend of mine who worked at Google. It's pretty high up at Google. And I was asking about like, why does it take so long to get things shipped there? And he said, he had a conversation with Eric Schmidt. And Eric said that remember that every problem we have is a problem at scale. There is no small problem at Google. And it's the same thing at the IRS. Every, every problem.
change to the tax code we make affects a vast number of highly diverse people, and you have to
account for every one of those possible edge cases. And so that's the core challenge and why
it's slower to do these things, because you have to account for all of these things.
There are people who are blind. There are people who are deaf. There are people who don't
use computers. There are people who just aren't capable of using computers. There are so many
different edge cases you have to handle for. There are people who don't
have a social security numbers. People don't have a driver's license. There's like every
possible edge case you have to figure out how to account for it. So a lot of that gets done
in the policy realm where they say for all of these things, how are we going to handle those
things? What is the cap for how much is exempt for no tax on tips? What is the interpretation
of the statute? How will we actually implement it in practice? At the end of the day,
for almost everything, where the rubber meets the road is in technology.
And so this is an interesting thing that I did not really expect in my role.
I thought it would be like IRS modernization is the one and only thing.
But what I've discovered is that in almost everything that you want to actually do in the government in terms of in full implementation, almost everything touches technology at least a little bit.
So I end up engaged in conversations on the Trump accounts, which are coming up, which is a thousand.
to every new born American.
Okay.
Yep.
That's another thing.
There's a whole bunch of policy stuff, but eventually computers are going to be the
ones doing it.
We've got to figure out how to do it.
Almost every policy change or anything you want to do eventually touches an IT
system.
So if you take the, if you take OB3, the tax policy folks are going to come up with
their interpretation.
They're going to work with us on the implementation of like how do we actually do it.
Then we have to turn that into changes to the core mainframe system because that's where a lot of the business logic lives.
Then you have to figure out how do you change whatever interface you have?
Does it does this require a change in the tax forms that also requires a change in technology?
Both to print the forms, to send out the forms, to receive the forms, that's the digital forms.
How does that connect to all the other things?
The tax code is very complex.
And so there are so many intermingled parts that you have to solve for.
So that's like a thing right now that we're working on.
It's mostly sitting right now with the tax policy folks.
But we know enough about where it will likely land that we're starting on the implementation now.
I suppose the interesting thing about tax as a person who is a super fucking noob about how this occurs, tax has to account for a big amount of income for the government.
Oh, yeah.
Right.
Do you have any idea how much?
much that is is a proportion of where money comes from.
It's almost all of it.
Right.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you are the guy.
Yeah.
Who is technically, technically in charge of the systems that acquire the revenue that the country needs to run.
You could put it that way.
Yeah.
That seems like a big deal.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a, the amount of leverage.
in the role is very interesting in both directions in both directions yeah it's pretty high stakes
the good news is that there are a lot of people working on this who have been working on this for a
long time and so I've only been there for six months but this is maybe to give credit to the civil
service system that we have a lot of these people have been there for a long time the trains
are going to keep running and things are going to keep getting done and even though I've only been
there for six months, I can have leverage one way or the other, but there's a very low
probability that any one person can come in and like really cause major problems in the
organization.
Mostly so far you've spoken about like implementation, it's been a little bit more dirt than
clouds, I would say.
When it comes to the cloud side, at least in IRS, is there an argument?
to be made for simplifying the tax code what would you do let's say that you were in charge
which you kind of are but not in that not in charge of that bit um what do you think would be
some good solutions i mean everyone largely agrees that a simplified tax code is better for
how complex is it currently maybe the most maybe the it might be the most complex tax system in
the world i would not be shocked if that was the case um
I spent some time in Estonia a while back, and they have probably the simplest tax code in the world.
It's a flat tax.
If you make this amount of money, this is how much you pay.
If you make this amount of money, that's how much you pay.
I think the average Estonian spends two minutes per year doing taxes.
It's like, how much did you make?
Multiply that by 0.2.
That's how much you pay.
And that's it.
That's the whole system.
Our system is massively more complex than that.
The problem is it's very hard to do that.
The IRS also doesn't do policy.
So it really has to come from Congress.
They have to be the ones who are willing to do it.
Yeah, but you're the guys that have got to work out how to code it, right, into the ledger.
If they could simplify it.
They've added another bylaw.
This is going to take ages.
Oh, yeah.
You talk to the people who have been here for a long time.
That is a thing they talk about a lot.
Like whenever there's a change of the tax code, because this often comes pretty late in
the game and you have like a very short timeline because you have to deliver it by roughly
February 1st. And so if you hear in September like, hey, by the way, massive change to the
tax code, good luck. It's a it's a struggle to get it done. But I think historically they've
done a pretty good job of getting those things done. It's so funny. I just I keep thinking about the
wielding politician or online commentator talking about we need to tax the rich
or we need to tax the poor or we need to simplify the whatever and um there is just this
total ignorance around you and what you do and the 12,000 people that in some form or another
have to make that happen yeah and uh that's one of the main realizations
that I'm taking away thus far
is that, yeah, the rubber really
does meet the fucking road at some point.
And like, what does this mean to enforce?
What does this mean to implement?
How do we change the systems on this?
What's the interpretation of this?
I went to the Moody Center,
the big arena thing downtown here in Austin,
and there was a automated corner shop type scenario.
You can get drinks and snacks and stuff like that.
and you go and you do it yourself and you scan thing and then you pay there's no staff there might be
one member of staff stood at the front who is just ensuring people like generally seem to be going
toward the till once they've got stuff in their hands but it asks for a tip yeah this automated
system asked for a tip and i think to myself well is that example is that a special type of tip
it's an interesting question i don't know because who the fuck am i tipping am i tipping the coder
that made this system?
Am I tipping the guy
that stood at the front,
the only member of staff
that's physically here?
Is this being fed into the servers
so that the, you know,
AI agents get a day out?
Like, what is this?
I think this is exactly the,
why these things are so complex
is that is one of the edge cases
that I'm sure the Office of Tax Policy
folks had to think about.
It's like, who is this tax exempt?
For whom?
Who knows?
Where's it going?
Where is it going?
Eventually we have to figure it out.
And I think your analogy of like in the clouds versus the dirt,
I probably spend 90% of my time in the dirt.
Most of my conversations are with the engineers on how do we implement this stuff?
How do we get it done?
How do we change our systems?
If we need to hire, why is our hiring process bad?
We have this other thing.
It's called an ATO process.
I believe it means authority to operate.
It's basically imagine you wanted to use.
an iPad or an app in your iPad, whatever it is. You want to use a tool. Somebody needs to
check to make sure that it is secure, that it meets our standards. That's the ATO process.
The IRS has probably the worst ATO process in the entire government. I've cataloged a lot of other
systems and how other agencies do it. Ours, I think, is the worst. And it's, it takes oftentimes
multiple years to get simple tools authorized to use. And so as a result, we're using code editors
from 20 years ago. We're using- So the only ones that have been proven secure previously.
Yep. Yeah, I mean, I think about trying to speak to my accountant in America. And if I want to
send documents, I can't do it through a ton of different services because she is at the mercy of
her organization's ATO equivalent.
And I think, oh, fuck, this is clunky, but, you know, at least it's secure.
And I suppose there is a trade-off between speed and security in this way.
And, yeah, the systems do need to be, I mean, fuck me.
What was it?
Like Boxing Day, PlayStation in 2014 or something got hacked and like hundreds of thousands of
people's data got diddled and then Microsoft had one.
And recently in the UK, Marks and Spencer, that are sort of a,
uprange supermarket.
Their online ordering seemed to stop almost immediately.
And then their shelves started to become empty.
And it looked like some sort of ransomware.
I don't even know if that ever got revealed.
I spoke to the BBC's cyber correspondent the same week it was happening.
And he sort of like I can neither confirm nor deny.
But basically said like, from what I've heard, it's fucked.
Like you've just got this big ransomware thing that's going on.
All of this shit's held.
You go, oh, it's impacted the supply chain, like, ordering logistics thing.
Oh, that's held for ransom.
And now you're just seeing, there's fewer sandwiches on the shelves.
They're just dwindling.
And people are like, I need to go to Tesco because Marcus and Spencer doesn't have this thing anymore.
And then the same week, co-op got popped.
And I think the same week as well, like Harrods got popped to or some of the big high street, you know, department store luxury thing.
So, yeah, when you get this wrong, and it's not like, oh, let's just look to the private sector.
They nail this all the time.
And like, they fuck it too.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And the stakes are pretty high for a lot of these things in government.
So I think the, there are, there are things that exist right now that have helped with a lot of these processes.
So there's something called FedRamp, which is a set of standards that give broad authority to work within the government.
So in the past, I've heard stories because I wasn't here in the pre-FedRamp days.
Anything you wanted, you had to go through like, your own.
own custom process to like check to make sure. And then if you as the vendor, if you had a
software product, if you wanted to go over to a different department, you had to go through this
whole thing. And it was just a major pain. I think it was GSA or maybe it was OMB, office management
budget, created this centralized concept called FedRamp, which is kind of like SOC2. If you know what
that is, it's a security standard. It's basically saying, we're going to verify that you do all
these things. And if you do, you can be used across government at that level of security.
And it's, it's a FedRamp comes in several different flavors. They're not, the, the ones that most
of them use, FedRamp moderate is not that bad. It's not that cumbersome for a company to use.
So it's, it takes some time, which I think is okay. But it, it, talking to people before FedRamp existed and how
incredibly painful it was, shows that there's
some progress being made in these things
and that's existed for some time.
Do you think it's healthy that taxpayers
are skeptical of the federal
government?
Yeah, for sure. I mean,
I think the
general skepticism
of how
these
how the power is used
against people. I know that there's
some of the skepticism comes from a world that I have really no exposure to, which is like the intelligence world, I think when it comes to the stuff that I have the most exposure to, which is within Treasury and IRS, and how the government muses our money. I think peak skepticism is probably warranted. There's an old joke of what's,
What's the best kind of military aircraft?
Okay.
And the answer is one that has a factory in every state and a part made in every district.
Right.
And I now understand that joke a lot better.
How so?
How does that relate to what you do?
Well, I don't have as much direct exposure to it in the treasury, but I see it, like friends of mine who are in DOD or friends of mine who are in all these different agencies.
the, all of the stuff that gets crammed into these bills from Congress are really where a lot of the challenges stem from.
There's a, there's a classic example of this, the littoral combat ship, which is a failed initiative by the U.S. Navy to build a type of ship.
It's pretty widely recognized as a major failure.
the simplified version of this problem was there was a simulation done that said,
okay, at the end of the simit, we recognize that we need a very lightweight ship that can go in shallow waters, very inexpensive.
Because in the future, instead of having a few very expensive ships that can be major targets,
we need lots of very inexpensive ships that can be in shallow waters.
Okay, cool.
Makes sense.
During the process of development, this is what I have heard, and I think this is all in government accountability office reports and things like that.
They said, oh, well, you know, my district makes missiles.
We should put missiles on it.
My district makes this thing.
We should put that on it.
Next thing you know, you have this completely pointless outcome, which is this actually quite large and very expensive ship that no longer serves a purpose for why it was originally commissioned.
But many, many billions of dollars have been spent on it, which for some people was the goal, but for other people, we still don't have that ship that we wanted.
So that's where a lot of these things end up getting stuck is in that congressional churn.
How long would it take do you think if you were to overhaul the whole IT system for the government, like to fix this legacy?
behemoth
and actually
get it up to speed
I'll
I'll start by
specifically talking about
IRS where I have the most exposure
I think
the core
the primary fix
is going to be
solving the data
integrity problem
that we have
that is the first
first and most
important deliverable
that I would say
that we have
We should be able to solve that within, call it three years, just based on the timelines that we're looking at.
Assuming that we don't run into problems with procurement, assuming we don't run into all these other kinds of issues, we should be able to do it within three-ish years.
Just about in time.
Yeah, right.
But there will be obviously incremental deliverables along the way that will solve a lot of problems.
I say like absolutely fully resolved by that point.
I think the fix, if you want to talk about, how do we actually fix it?
It's less about a specific fix to the software, and it's much more a fix to the organization.
We don't have a budget problem in IT at IRS.
We really have a management and leadership challenge within the scope of that organization.
and how for many, many decades.
If we can change the mindset from pay vendors a whole bunch of money to solve our problems,
and we can learn how to listen to our internal stakeholders,
this has been my main focus for the last several weeks is just because the system is old
does not mean that it's bad.
So it is hubris to think that a system that has had quite literally a million
hours of labor put into it to make it good at this thing, that you can rewrite it from
scratch and then cut over one day and then it will suddenly start working. It's just completely
and utterly unrealistic. And so how do we take the existing systems? How do we incrementally
improve them? How do we change the culture to where we are building software in the way
that software is really meant to be used, which is this, it's more like the puppy in the
analogy earlier, where you're feeding it, you're training it, you're evolving it over time,
you're not just throwing a bunch of money at it, and then just ignoring it for 20 years.
We need to figure out how to get into a software development life cycle that's actually relevant
for software.
And what about the government outside of the IRS?
Different organizations have different challenges.
And so I mentioned earlier some of the data quality problems.
I wish
maybe we can do this
afterwards.
I can call my friend Clark
who's the
CIO over at HHS
and he has been trying to figure out
how to fix their payroll system
which is
I'll go into the specifics
just because it's indicative
of the kinds of problems
that you see all over the place
when you're actually like
in the dirt trying to solve these problems.
HHS
they have 30-ish people full-time, whose job it is, is to run payroll.
And most private sector companies, this is done by a company like ADP or Rippling or whatnot.
There are companies that just do your payroll.
Here, they have to do, they have to request all of their records from all of the different sub-components.
I think there are roughly 40 of them.
They then send over spreadsheets of all their employees and how much they should get paid.
those 30 people have to reconcile those to make sure they're all formatted properly.
They then send that spreadsheet to a mainframe at the FAA to run a bunch of cobal scripts,
which I don't think anyone even knows what they do anymore because they're just been running.
They're all on these calls.
Just every time there's an error, they just manually reconcile it.
They then take the output of that FAA mainframe.
They then send that over to a DOD computer for processing.
They then get the result from the DOD computer.
they then chop it up and then they send that information to each of those groups and then they
manually enter it into their into their financial system.
That is how they do payroll.
That is like the full-time job of dozens of people.
And these things are not that hard to do with computers, but it's just always been that way.
And so there hasn't really been a push to fix it because it technically works.
They are able to do payroll.
but that's sort of indicative of the kinds of problems that you see all across the government.
There's just, there are so few people who are thinking upstream of why are we doing it like this?
Why are we doing this at all?
It's like the fax problem I was mentioning.
It's like, why are we getting faxes still?
What are we doing?
It's like, I don't know.
It's the way we've always done it.
It's like, right, but these other ways are so much better.
It's like, well, I don't know, it's too much of a challenge to change it.
or maybe we don't think we can.
It's not really clear.
So to take that as like a specific example from HHS of your question of how do you fix it in government.
It's not really about fixing specific systems.
It's about changing leadership within IT, making it so that more of the people who are leading, more of the chief information officers, making them technical so that they know how to build software.
that would be a huge improvement.
Having more people in engineering who are engineers, that would be a huge improvement.
If you have people whose jobs are to, if they are non-technical people whose jobs, which is a huge chunk of the population at IRS, if your job is to manage a vendor, but you don't know what the vendor's doing, you're probably not going to do a great job at managing that vendor.
So I think that's the core shift.
than we need to have is in the same way that we treat the legal function,
counsel's office, as having some set of standards and some expectation of what it is their job does,
I think we need to apply that same logic to engineering across the government.
So I guess I'm interested in, personally for you,
you were famous, are famous, for a lot of time tracking,
complex system of executive assistant virtual assistants
helping you do the things at levels and all the other shit you were doing in your life
how much of that has been able to transition over to this new life
less of it than I would have liked I think the the biggest change in my current role
in the government historically I
historically I really optimize for having a lot of deep focus time.
My phone for the better part of 10 years just defaulted to do not disturb.
And I would have consistently five, six, eight hours of just uninterrupted focus time.
I am now almost as far in the opposite direction of that as can be imagined.
I have multiple phones, they ring constantly, and I've largely just accepted that I'm not going to get very much focused time.
I have set a goal that I want to try to contribute production COBOL code before the end of this year, because I've never really been in a system like that before.
So I'm going to try to find a way to block off some time before the end of the year to do that.
but generally speaking like very little of it translates some of it is helpful in just being able to block off time for when I know I need to review things making sure I have capacity to resolve the things that need to get resolved but are you still tracking your time in the same way generally speaking I track it in my government calendar it's like my my days now are mostly meetings
It's like meetings, phone calls.
You were famous for not that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
For trying to minimize the number.
And actually, still, I tried to minimize the number of meetings already.
And I probably have a solid six to eight hours of meetings every day.
What about the army of assistance you had?
Have you been able to bring those over with you?
Nope.
No, no.
So you're a one-man band now, largely.
Yep.
And I have, I do have somebody who helps me with scheduling, which interestingly is like,
the one thing I didn't use an assistant for before because I used
calendly or some similar scheduling tool.
That's not OAP.
It's not ATOed.
Exactly.
Fuck sake.
Yeah.
So you're telling me that inside of the government there is not a like calendar
scheduling.
This is one I'm available.
And there might be one in government.
Right.
But we don't have one at Treasury as far as I know.
I think, uh, presumably it would be APOed for you if it was.
Yeah.
I think that we have one.
I think that the GSA has.
has one because they're a Google shop, we're a Microsoft shop. I think Google has one pre-built
into their calendar. Okay. Yeah. Microsoft needs to add that in, please, if that's okay.
What's happening with levels? It's still going. Yeah. I tried, I was a little bit too ambitious
with how I thought I could manage my time. And I thought I could be the CEO of levels and take
on this role at the same time. And after after a couple months of frankly doing a very poor job
as the CEO of levels, I recommend to the board that we put my co-founder in as the CEO.
And so he's been running it as the CEO. So I'm on sabbatical. And he's been doing a good job.
So I feel I feel much better about it. I was getting, it was really stressing me out because
I would schedule time. It's like you schedule three hours to do my level stuff. And
I'm in a meeting with the Levels leadership team,
and it's like the White House is calling me.
It's like, oh, shit, what do I do?
It's like, you got to take the White House call.
Like, what are you going to do?
What was it like, you know, you've got this business, co-founder, CEO,
people working, technology, new stuff, exciting.
Isn't that cool?
Guys, I'm going to leave to take 160 grand of your position inside of the treasury.
Yeah.
How'd that go down?
I was, so part of the reason why,
Because people had been asking me to consider this as far back as December when, after the president won the election.
And I said, no, because I'm running this company.
We have a baby.
We have another one coming in this December.
Like there's so many things, so many reasons not to do this.
And eventually with my wife's encouragement and then really actually the encouragement of our board, they said, like, if there was ever a time to do this.
This is it. We have enough cash. The major decisions that need to be made by me have largely already been made. The major decisions that need to be made outside of my scope, those people are still there. So if there was ever a time to take a sabbatical to do this, this is it. I think we also made some false assumptions about how much capacity I would have to still contribute to levels, which I'm still, I still have regular
conversations with my co-founder now CEO. So we're in touch pretty regularly on this stuff.
But it was originally going to be six months. It's looking like it's probably going to extend
through at least the end of the year because there are a handful of things that we really need
to get delivered before I go back. That's really where it stands now. How long do you think
you're going to stay in this position? The current plan is still January.
What's the likelihood of you extending that again?
I think if, you know, if the Treasury Secretary or the president says, like, we need you to do this, you probably say yes.
If it's just, if I no longer feel that I can be effective in this role, if it's just like trickling off in terms of my effectiveness, then I think that's fine.
I think we've already made some very significant changes that would be long lasting.
I think the longer I can do it, the better.
But a big part of it is like, how long can you tolerate burning through your savings?
There is a factor for that.
And there's, you know, there's opportunity costs.
It's part of the reason why I thought this would be a thing I do when I'm retired, not in the peak earning years.
Right, yeah, because it's not just burning through savings.
it's the loss in potential additional revenue for you yeah so i mean it is you know uh government
servant there is a big sort of arc of service yeah here especially when you compare it to being
CEO of fast growing exciting tech company that can do wearables and health and stuff like that um
it is a sacrifice in order to be able to do that should it be that way should it be a sacrifice to
work for it? It should not be a, it should stand in its own two feet as a position in and of
itself? I think on the salary that you can make in these rules, you can make it work, but it's
certainly a lot more challenging than it would be if you took an equivalent role in the private
sector. That wasn't in D.C. That wasn't in D.C. Yeah. I wonder whether just from an influence
perspective, you know, birth rates, not great in America, not great anywhere. But, yeah.
specifically in America at the moment, and I wonder what the downstream impact of the
selection effect of having a bunch of people who really find it hard to have families being
in government, who are the ones that are contributing to and thinking about these problems,
because you are selecting out anybody who does have a family, or if not, they're having a
family in a very particular sort of unique kind of way, that...
When you think about sort of elected officials, they are representatives of the constituents, but they are unrepresentative of the sort of life that so many people lead.
So you have this kind of detachment between the two. I wonder if you've thought about that.
Yeah. It's definitely a real impact. And you see this in, you see this especially in the leadership roles.
That's where this divergence gets quite large is once you get past this early to mid career where the government can actually be reasonably competitive, people start to leave for the private sector.
And those tend to be your most capable people, the people with the most context knowledge of the systems that they're working on.
I think there's also this general issue where when I'm looking to hire right now, when I'm trying to bring people on,
for these appointed roles or these leadership roles, the only two categories of people
that are in a position where I've been able to get them converted are either sufficiently
young that they have no expenses or they are either at or near retirement where their kids
are already in college or off like beyond college. They have enough money saved up and
they want to do this to like do public service. And that's, it's effectively.
their retirement project.
Those are really the only two camps that I've been able to convert on these things because
the amount of effort that you have to put in, the opportunity cost of people who are in these
peak earning years is too high.
They have to relocate to D.C. for the most part, it's just too much of a lift to get people
to be able to do that.
How do you ensure that the changes
that you implement are permanent because you leave teachers gone out of the classroom
and the slow regression back to the mean begins all over again yeah we talk a lot about
how do we make sure the weeds don't grow back that's a big part of the reason why I've
agreed to stay for longer is some of the weeds would grow back I can I can already see
it happening haven't pulled the roots yeah exactly I already see it happening on some of the
things that I've tried to change.
And so I need to stick around for long enough to make sure that it gets solved.
I think procurement reform is going to be a big one, a lot of personnel reform.
This is one of the other interesting observations because I've had many of these conversations.
People talk about how it feels like the momentum is slowing.
It feels like, you know, the amount of money being saved is it's all slowing down.
And it's a surreal experience because from the inside, it feels like the exact opposite.
We're just now starting to figure out how this actually works.
It feels like we're only just now starting to figure out how do we actually fix the procurement system at its root?
How do we actually make changes?
How do we implement a better performance review system?
How do we fix the hiring process across all of Treasury?
We're thinking more...
more fundamentally instead of just cutting contracts, which is good. But it really feels like, from my
perspective, somebody who's in the dirt for pretty much all day, every day, we're only just now
starting to understand how to affect these systems in a way that will be permanent. So it feels
like we're, there are a lot of reforms. Some of these things require a legislative fix. It requires an act of Congress.
I haven't really seen a lot of movement there, but I know there are now people thinking about as we make more progress within the executive, how do we start to look towards changes in legislation that will change these things in a permanent way that are even outside of what's available in the executive branch?
Well, Godspeed over the next few months, man.
It was not a predicted pivot.
I think we went for coffee maybe eight months ago, something like that.
And if you'd said, yeah, I'm going to be the secretary.
The CEO of the fucking treasury department would not have been on my 2025 bingo card.
Yeah, same.
I hope you survive it.
And I hope that the next kid thing comes through.
And I look forward to doing the post-mortem with you as well when you come back up for a.
Oh, yeah.
Let's do it.
I appreciate you, man.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I get asked all the time for book suggestions. People want to get into reading fiction or nonfiction or real life stories. And that's why I made a list of 100 of the most interesting and impactful books that I've ever read. These are the most life-changing reads that I've ever found. And there's descriptions about why I like them and links to go and buy them. And it's completely free. And you can get it right now by going to chriswillex.com slash books. That's chriswillex.com slash books.
Thank you.