Tag: subcommittee

  • House DOGE subcommittee chair Greene wages ‘war on waste’ in first hearing

    House DOGE subcommittee chair Greene wages ‘war on waste’ in first hearing

    The House Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency held its first ever hearing Wednesday, as Republicans criticized the soaring $36 trillion national debt, as well as Democrats’ condemnation of Elon Musk’s effort to slash waste.

    In her opening statement, Chairwoman Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-S.C., said the committee must be “brutally honest about how this massive debt came to be in the first place – it came from Congress and from elected presidential administrations.” 

    “We as Republicans and Democrats can still hold tightly to our beliefs, but we are going to have to let go of funding them in order to save our sinking ship,” Greene said. “This is not a time for political theater and partisan attacks. The American people are watching. The legislative branch can’t sit on the sidelines. In this subcommittee, we will fight the war on waste shoulder to shoulder with President Trump, Elon Musk and the DOGE team.” 

    Greene said, “enslaving our nation in debt” is one of the “biggest betrayals against the American people’s own elected government” and vowed that her subcommittee, operating under the House Oversight Committee, would work with President Donald Trump’s newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which is spearheaded by Musk as part of the executive branch. 

    DOGE SLASHES OVER $100M IN DEI FUNDING AT EDUCATION DEPARTMENT: ‘WIN FOR EVERY STUDENT’

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., talks with her counsel as she presides over a House DOGE subcommittee hearing on “The War on Waste: Stamping Out the Scourge of Improper Payments and Fraud,” on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    “The federal government, government employees, and unelected bureaucrats do not live by the same rules as the great American people and private businesses,” Greene said. “The federal government’s income is the American people’s hard-earned tax dollars. Their literal blood, sweat and tears and taxes are collected by law at gunpoint. Don’t pay your taxes and you go to jail. The federal government does not have to provide excellent customer service to earn its income. It takes your money whether you like it or not. And federal employees receive their paycheck no matter what.” 

    The subcommittee’s highest ranking Democrat, Rep. Melanie Stanbury of New Mexico, used her opening statement to slam Trump and Musk’s efforts, despite agreeing to a bipartisan approach to “digging into the more than $236 billion in improper payments that we see going out the door every single year,” as well as “putting into place rigorous oversight and controls to prevent fraud and abuse, and, of course, to go after bad actors.” 

    “We can’t just sit here today and pretend like everything is normal and that this is just another hearing on government efficiency,” Stanbury said.Because while we’re sitting here, Donald Trump and Elon Musk are recklessly and illegally dismantling the federal government, shuttering federal agencies, firing federal workers, withholding funds vital to the safety and well-being of our communities, and hacking our sensitive data systems.” 

    One of the witnesses, Stephen Whitson of the Foundation for Government Accountability, testified that DOGE’s efforts have exposed $59 million paid to luxury hotels in New York City to house illegal immigrants, $1.5 million to advance diversity, equity and inclusion in Serbia’s workplaces, $32,000 for a transgender comic book in Peru, $10 million worth of food assistance funneled to al Qaeda and “the list goes on.” 

    “But rather than applauding the work of DOGE, the left has launched a coordinated campaign to try to demonize Mr. Musk with the hope of shifting focus away from the disastrous waste, fraud and abuse that occurred on Biden’s watch. But guess what? It’s not working,” Whitson said. 

    Whitson tesifies

    Former FBI Special Agent Senior Director of Federal Affairs Foundation for Government Accountability Stewart Whitson appears before a House DOGE subcommittee hearing on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    He shifted to the focus of Wednesday’s subcommittee hearing, Medicaid waste and fraud, testifying that more than 80% of improper Medicaid payments are due to eligibility errors, which Congress must address. Whitson testified that one in five dollars spent on Medicaid is improper, and Medicaid fraud and mismanagement is on track to cost U.S. taxpayers $1 trillion in the next 10 years. 

    ‘OBAMA BROS’ ON DOGE: ‘SOME OF THE STUFF WE SHOULD’VE DONE’

    Whitson also offered Congress three ways to support Trump’s DOGE effort. The first is for Congress to strengthen the Medicaid program through legislative action. He testified that both the Biden and Obama administrations issued rules and guidance that made it harder for states to verify eligibility for Medicaid. He said repealing Biden’s Medicaid streamlining rule, which restricts eligibility verification that states can perform, would save $164 billion over 10 years. 

    In a later exchange, Whitson said the Biden-era rule prohibits states from verifying eligibility more than once a year and prohibits in-person or phone call interviews to verify the recipient’s identity. 

    It also opens “lengthy reconsideration periods,” opening the door for illegal immigrants to receive benefits. 

    “A state has to wait at least 90 days” before verifying whether a recipient is an illegal immigrant, Whitson said. “And actually what we’re seeing is it’s let some states to wait as long as 13 years.” 

    Elon Musk and President Donald Trump

    Elon Musk, left, speaks as President Donald Trump looks on in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 11, 2025. (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)

    Secondly, Whitson said Congress could help DOGE by “ensuring that entrenched partisan bureaucrats don’t stand in the way of reform.” To do that, Congress must codify the president’s authority “to fire unproductive or insubordinate agency employees as needed,” as well as grant the president authority to permanently eliminate vacant positions and consolidate nonessential positions across agencies and departments to help promote efficiency, Whitson said.

    “Personnel is policy, and without competent staff to faithfully execute the president’s agenda, the DOGE project will fail,” he said. 

    Thirdly, Whitson called on Congress to pass the REINS Act to “make President Trump’s DOGE cost-cutting and de-regulatory reforms permanent.” 

    “There’s only one big problem with the DOGE effort. Most of its work can be undone by a future president with the stroke of a pen,” he said, adding that the REINS Act would “return Article One budgetary power of the purse to Congress while promoting deregulation. It would also help lock in the DOGE reforms and cement President Trump’s legacy as the most consequential de-regulatory and cost-cutting president in U.S. history.” 

    At another point in the hearing, Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., played out archived video of former President Bill Clinton in 1997 and former President Barack Obama in 2011 pledging to reduce the federal workforce and close hundreds of government offices outside of Washington. Obama spoke in 2011 of his administration’s “Campaign to Cut Waste,” saying at the time, “We thought that it was entirely appropriate for our governments and our agencies to try to root out waste, large and small, in a systematic way.” From the Oval Office, Obama added that “a lot of the action is in Congress and legislative, but in the meantime, we don’t need to wait for Congress in order to, do something about wasteful spending that’s out there.” 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Burlison said the video was meant to “remind my Democratic friends at a point in which you once had the majority of the American people on your side.” 

  • Marjorie Taylor Greene shares what’s next for her DOGE subcommittee

    Marjorie Taylor Greene shares what’s next for her DOGE subcommittee

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., is already planning future hearings for her new subcommittee panel, which was named to correspond with Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

    Greene told reporters after her subcommittee’s first public event that the next two would examine the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and media outlets NPR and PBS.

    Musk has also targeted NPR and USAID since leading President Donald Trump’s DOGE advisory team.

    “We’re working on filling the calendar with many more important issues, departments, government programs that the American people deserve direct, hard transparency into,” Greene told reporters. “And then we’re going to be coming up with solutions.”

    BLACK CAUCUS CHAIR ACCUSES TRUMP OF ‘PURGE’ OF ‘MINORITY’ FEDERAL WORKERS

    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene spoke with reporters about Elon Musk and her DOGE subcommittee after its first hearing. (AP/Sipa USA)

    When asked if one of those hearings could feature Musk himself, Greene suggested that was not in the works.

    “I think Democrats want Elon Musk in front of the committee so they can berate him, attack him and harass him,” Greene said. “Right now, President Trump, myself and many others really want Elon Musk to stay focused on what he’s doing, and that is rooting out the waste, fraud and abuse that has continued on for years within the federal government agencies.”

    She said her committee would release a report “in a matter of days” on its findings from its first hearing, which focused on government spending through the lens of the $36 trillion national debt. 

    SCOOP: KEY CONSERVATIVE CAUCUS DRAWS RED LINE ON HOUSE BUDGET PLAN

    Greene said she intends to hold a subcommittee hearing on USAID.

    Greene said she intends to hold a subcommittee hearing on USAID. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)

    Greene said the report “is going to highlight what we found in this hearing and the solutions that we have to implement in Congress.” 

    “I’ll be meeting with chairs of committees of jurisdiction, and I’ll be talking with the speaker, our leader and our whip and all of Congress to put these solutions into practice as soon as possible,” she said.

    The hearing, which ran roughly two hours, saw Democrats repeatedly try to shift the focus onto Musk and his activities, earning rebukes from Republican lawmakers in the room.

    “You’re having to defend all of this crazy spending, all of this crazy waste. So how do you do it? You do ad hominem attacks, you attack the messenger,” Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., said during the hearing. “Oh, Elon Musk, right? He’s rich. He must be evil, right? That’s the attacks. Really? You can’t do any better than that?” 

    Rep. Michael Cloud questions U.S. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle

    Rep. Michael Cloud said Democrats’ attacks on Elon Musk fall flat with Americans. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)

    Rep. Michael Cloud, R-Texas, dismissed concerns after the hearing that Democrats’ focus on Musk would be a potent attack strategy.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “I don’t think it’s going to win with the American people,” Cloud told Fox News Digital. “I think what they’ll see is that the American people voted for what is happening right now, and they want to see dramatic change. They know that the federal government is not working for their benefit, and want to see a major course correction.”

    The DOGE subcommittee operates under the House Oversight Committee. It’s the first committee gavel for Greene.

  • House Dem expects first DOGE subcommittee meeting to be ‘full-on combat’

    House Dem expects first DOGE subcommittee meeting to be ‘full-on combat’

    Sparks are expected to fly at Congress’ first Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) subcommittee meeting Wednesday, according to one Democratic lawmaker in the House of Representatives.

    Democrats have blasted billionaire Elon Musk, who President Donald Trump tapped to lead DOGE, over the past week for trying to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse in federal spending and trim the more than 2-million-person federal workforce.

    Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, told Axios that she plans to use the hearing to “clarify for the American people” why DOGE’s actions are “illegal” and why “Elon Musk has no official role to do this.” 

    “I think it’s going to be a sh–show. I don’t really anticipate anything productive coming out of this,” Crockett said. “I don’t anticipate that it’s going to be nice. I anticipate full-on combat, because DOGE is clearly the devil right now.”

    DOGE SLASHES OVER $100M IN DEI FUNDING AT EDUCATION DEPARTMENT: ‘WIN FOR EVERY STUDENT’

    Rep. Jasmine Crockett speaks during the We Choose To Fight: Nobody Elected Elon rally at the U.S. Department of the Treasury on Feb. 4, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Jemal Countess/Getty Images for MoveOn)

    DOGE subcommittee chair Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., told the outlet she has “high hopes” that Republicans and Democrats will engage productively during the hearing, which she said will focus on “Medicaid improper payments.”

    “We’re going to be talking about solutions, there are going to be big savings,” she said, adding that she feels the issue is bipartisan.

    ‘THIS HAS TO STOP’: HOUSE DEM FACES BACKLASH FOR ‘PROMOTING PHYSICAL VIOLENCE’ AT DOGE PROTEST

    On Tuesday, Musk appeared with Trump in the Oval Office as the president prepared to sign an executive order concerning the billionaire’s work leading DOGE.

    Musk, in some of his first public comments on leading DOGE, told reporters that there are some good people in the federal bureaucracy, but that they need to be accountable, and the budget deficit needs to be addressed.

    Musk and Trump in Oval Office

    President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as Elon Musk listens in the Oval Office at the White House on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)

    He also pushed back against critics who have accused him of mounting a hostile takeover of the government, saying he wants to add “common-sense controls” to federal spending and that cutting government waste is not “draconian.”

    CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “The people voted for major government reform, and that’s what the people are going to get,” Musk said. “That’s what democracy is all about.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.