The Democrat senator went to a crude online Tillard over Elon Musk's demand for government efficiency (DOGE) to answer a brief question about productivity for all federal workers.
Tina Smith (D-Minn.) said on Saturday, “What did you do last week?”
Smith's tilade is because several government departments, including the FBI at Kash Patel, have instructed employees not to respond to messages.
Similar to sporadic requests, the Department of Human Resources has announced demand for federal workers, just like the demand for Musk to blow up Tesla and SpaceX employees. We have instructed not to include classified materials.
Musk then publicly wrote to X, “A failure to respond will be considered a resignation.” He asserted, “The bar is very low here.”
“This is the ultimate move from the D-K boss. He's just an ad, except that he's not even a boss.”
“A lot of people must have experienced this with a bad boss. An email in your inbox on a Saturday night saying, “Prove your worth on Monday or otherwise.” There is. I'm not a billionaire, I'm on the side of the workers.
Amid a turmoil within the federal government, Musk defended the missile as “a very basic pulse check.”
“The reason this is important is that a considerable number of people who are supposed to work for the government aren't doing enough work to not check their emails at all!” he in Firestorm I fought with X.
“In some cases, we believe that the identities of non-existent and dead people are used to collect pay.”
The email explosion soon took place shortly after President Trump encouraged Musk to “become more aggressive.”
Several major Trump administration officials have instructed staff not to reply to musk-oriented emails from the OPM.
The State Department followed staffing, saying “no employee is required to report activities outside the department's chain of command.”
Recently confirmed FBI director Patel told staff that he should “suspend responses” to the mask request, highlighting the department is in charge of personnel decisions.
Pentagon officials also sent a counter email asking employees to refrain from responding to OPM requests.
Similarly, there have been similar reports on other agencies related to national security, with staff tweaking away from the response. “The agency will decide on the next step,” OPM said.
“We've already received a lot of good responses. These are the people that should be considered for promotion,” Musk added of the ordeal.
The dissonance of top Democrats in Congress came in an email from Musk.
Jerry Connolly (D-Va.), a ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, wrote to OPM Director Charles Ezell.
Several federal union officials, such as the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU), have openly encouraged members not to reply to Missive, and those members do not work at OPM, and notes are not coordinated between agencies. It claims to have been sent at first glance.
They also suggest a potential lawsuit against email blasting.
Last week, unions filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, claiming that OPM does not have legal authority to oversee federal employees in other agencies and departments.
So far, the Musk's Doge team, which works closely with OPM, claims they have saved taxpayers billions of dollars through various cost-cutting initiatives.
That's the Trump administration It is estimated that he was fired or fired At least 20,000 people within the past month.
