He puts D in Doge.
California Democrats trolled Firebrand Gop Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene on Wednesday while hearing the Doge Subcommittee by bringing in “D-K PIC” and releasing a huge photo of Elon Musk.
Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) has been in the X-rating of his compromised former eldest son Hunter Biden, who has compromised with several women and several women at a July House Oversight Committee hearing. After showing off the images, I took a swipe on Green (R-Ga.) 2023.
“In the last assembly, Speaker Green literally showed a photo of AD-K at the assembly hearing, so I thought I'd bring it too,” Garcia said.
“Of course, this is President Elon Musk,” he added.
“He is also the richest man in the world. He was the biggest political donor in the last election. He has billions of dollars in conflicts of interest, and he remains with Donald Trump. I know I lead the glove of encouraged powers.”
During the 2023 hearing, Green whipped an explicit photo of Little Biden. Well, Little Biden raised concerns that his 53-year-old ex-old son flushes mans acts. For prostitution, discharge, or other immoral purposes. ”
Biden's Smutty photo was censored and she warned viewers that “parental discretion is advised,” but Democrats were still furious at the move.
Wednesday's session was the Doge Subcommittee's first major hearing and was intended to be the opening salvo in Green's quest to create legislative solutions to government inefficiency.
The subcommittee, which is under the House Oversight Committee, will complement the masked doge and doge caucus in both chambers of both Congress.
“The American people are being slaved to debt to everyone who owns our debts…it will destroy us all,” Green declared in her opening remarks. .
“Let's be cruelly honest about how this massive debt turned out to be in the first place,” she continued.
“It came from Congress and from an elected presidential administration, and enslaving our nation into debt is one of the greatest betrayals of its own elected government to the American people. I believe that.”
The hearing was then quickly left to a partisan quarrel match as Democrats held the oversized role of Musk in accusing President Trump of restricting the federal government and breaking the law.
“People said they were angry at Tiktok, but I am angry at people running on Twitter.
“It's time to work and hold back this illicit actor known as Elon Musk.”
Oversight Committee Chairman Jerry Connolly (D-Va.) has denounced Trump and Musk's approach to government enlargement as “wrecking ball,” to curb inappropriate payments and better enforce tax laws. called for more intentional reforms.
“Wreckingball is not going to do that, and I don't intend to support that approach to waste, fraud and abuse within the federal government,” he said.
Republicans raged on Democrats, troubling them with questions about government waste.
“We are revealing that this could be the biggest money laundering scandal in American history,” Sen. Brandon Gill (R-Texas) fought back at one point. “And I couldn't really care about the other side of the aisle. … Everything they want to talk about. [is] Elon Musk is constantly.
“I want to ask if Democrats really care unlike the bureaucrats who decide our lives, and they say God Anthony Fawk is forcing Americans to order vaccines and masks. Where were you whenever you did it?”
Democrats brought in Dylan Hedler Gaudette, director of government affairs for the project on government oversight, as the main witness for Republicans to counter the three experts at the hearing.
Hedtler-Gaudette wore sunglasses while he was hearing, as he suffered from Type 2 Usher syndrome, which made him blind.
During the hearing, he was critical of the Trump administration's efforts to cut the workforce, arguing that the inappropriate payments the government made had many nuances.
“Inappropriate payments can be a function of poor recordkeeping.
“Sometimes they come through human error, sometimes they come through negligence,” he continued.
“Inappropriate payments aren't just a feature in which bad people do bad things with bad intentions.”
At one point, he warned that Trump's decision to fire 12 inspectors could harm the government's efforts to eradicate bloating.
“It completely undermines our ability to eradicate waste, fraud and abuse,” Whitson said.
However, amid all the fighting and epic standouts during the two-hour heating hearing, several witnesses were able to get some important suggestions for lawmakers to assess.
Stewart Whitson, senior director of federal affairs at the Government Accountability Foundation, stressed that Trump and Musk “just hurt the surface.”
“If this lot of these scams were exposed in weeks, imagine something else buried beneath the deficit and government excuses,” said Whitson, a former FBI agent.
“Congress will carry out the President's efforts by making the freedom to work on employees of all administrative departments as necessary, and by codifying the President's authority, and “It can codify the authority of the company,” he added.
Haywood Talcove, CEO of Lexis Nexis Risk Solution, explained that while the majority of government agencies use outdated technology, they are also hampered by a set of tedious rules.
“They use very old technology,” Talcove says.
“One of the things I think have to happen is simplifying these processes and systems, using the technology that we use every day in the private sector.”
Talcove also argued that the 1974 Privacy Act required adjustments to allow the Fed to better crack down on fraudulent payments.
Meanwhile, Dawn Royal, director of the Welfare Fraud Council, urged lawmakers to deal with fraud within the Social Welfare Program.
“Ensuring vulnerable citizens have access to these welfare programs does not mean we simply turn a blind eye to integrity,” she warned.
“If we don't pursue fraud prevention, detection and prosecution, taxpayers become victims.”
At the end of the hearing, Greene messed around with plans to prepare a report on legislative solutions for government waste, which is expected to be released over the next few months.
Republican leaders are looking for ways to codify Musk and Trump's actions into law as Doge faces legal obstacles to the court.
