Federal Judge Delays Ruling on Restraining Order Against DOGE and Musk

The Epoch Times Header

The 14 states, led by New Mexico, say letting DOGE access federal data endangers the public.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan on Feb. 14 delayed ruling on 14 states’ request that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) be barred from accessing government information systems.

At a hearing in the case of New Mexico v. Musk, the Washington-based judge seemed skeptical of the states’ motion for a temporary restraining order against DOGE and its leader, tech entrepreneur Elon Musk.

Chutkan, who previously oversaw the now-dismissed election interference case against President Donald Trump, directed the plaintiff states to file proposed wording for the temporary restraining order they are seeking with the court by 5 p.m. on Feb. 15. She has not indicated when she will rule on the motion.

The judge acknowledged that the security of government information systems is important.

“Once financial or other confidential data is made public you can’t un-ring that bell, you can’t get it back,” the judge said.

President Donald Trump implemented DOGE, an advisory body that audits federal agencies and recommends cost-cutting actions, on Jan. 20 by issuing Executive Order 14158, which directs DOGE to modernize federal technology to improve governmental productivity and efficiency.

DOGE is not a new office. The executive order reorganized the U.S. Digital Service—which President Barack Obama created in 2014 within the Executive Office of the President—as the U.S. DOGE Service, according to a Congressional Research Service report. The Obama administration used the office to improve digital services after the Healthcare.gov website was unveiled.

Trump also signed Executive Order 14210 on Feb. 11, which directs all agency heads to work with DOGE to reduce staffing and limit hiring.

The White House has referred to Musk as a special government employee, which allows for the potential to avoid disclosure rules regarding possible conflicts of interest and finances that generally apply to other government workers.

New Mexico, Michigan, California, Massachusetts, and 10 other states argued in a legal complaint filed on Feb. 13 that Musk, “with President Donald J. Trump’s approval, has roamed through the federal government unraveling agencies, accessing sensitive data, and causing mass chaos and confusion for state and local governments, federal employees, and the American people.”

By Matthew Vadum

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

Columns

Could This Be the Death of a Political Party?

The landslide election win of Trump has brought long overdue changes to Washington, one of which is the imminent demise of the Democrat party by suicide.

An Air Disaster that Ended Well, But Not for Democrats

The Democrats immediately took to blaming the Delta Flight 4819 crash in Canada on Trump and his efforts to downsize government with DOGE and Elon Musk.

Federal Bureaucratic Workers Expose Themselves

When Trump took office only 5% of Washington, D.C.s Fed. govt. workers were reporting physically to work, and 25% of DCs office space was unused and available.

Via Executive Order, Trump Cuts Funding to Universities That Still Mandate COVID Shots

Cutting off federal funding for non-compliance, Trump outlawed COVID-19 mandates at universities that cling to the policy as prerequisite for students and staff.

Waste, Corruption and Foreign Meddling – And On Our “Nickel”

In one of his first EOs after taking office, Trump suspended all foreign aid ($68 billion), pending a review of its alignment with US national interests.

News

Transit Agency Sues Federal Government for Canceling Manhattan Toll Program

New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority sued the federal government for canceling a tolling program aimed at relieving traffic congestion in NYC.

Trump Agenda Slowed by Flood of Lawsuits

Within first month of Trump’s second term, he has encountered more than 70 sometimes overlapping lawsuits challenging his actions pushing forward his agenda.

Senior US Prosecutor Resigns After Demand to Open Probe of Biden-Era Contract

Senior U.S. prosecutor, Denise Cheung, resigned after allegedly asked to launch an investigation into a contract awarded while Biden was in office.

RFK Jr. Has Early Mandate to Tackle Childrens’ Health

Immediately after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was sworn in as the secretary of HHS he was tasked with heading up a commission primarily focused on childhood health.

Judge Rejects Request to Block DOGE From Accessing Government Data

Federal judge turned down request from group of state AGs to block DOGE from accessing data at 7 government agencies, finding states had not met bar for relief.

Judge Weighs Bid by Federal Unions to Block Government Downsizing

Federal judge heard arguments on whether to block mass firings and new employee buyout programs by fed gov, "he'll issue a decision “sooner rather than later.” 

30 Takeaways From Trump’s First 30 Days in Office

A month into his second admin, Trump has signed dozens of EOs and advanced key policies reshaping both Washington and the office of the presidency.

Judge Orders Trump Admin to Reinstate Fired Merit Systems Protection Board Chair

Federal judge ordered Trump and federal officials to reinstate Cathy A. Harris, recently removed as chairwoman of the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central