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Trump posts SpongeBob meme to poke fun at outrage over Elon Musk’s email asking federal workers what they did last week

President Trump made a joke using SpongeBob's square meme edited Sunday and enjoyed anger over Elon Musk's demand to explain what federal workers did at work last week.

The 47th President coordinated the email sent over the weekend from the Human Resources Bureau to five achievements by 11:59pm on Monday, coordinating Musk and his approval at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Apparently they asked employees to list.

Musk then claimed that X was supposed to be the one who refuses to respond and is expected to have resigned.

President Trump will speak at a National Association of Governors (NGA) dinner and reception at the East Room in the White House in Washington, DC on February 22, 2025. Reuters

Trump, 78, drew paper and pencil pads and pencils while the second pad held by SpongeBob's fellow members showed an edit list titled “I went last week.” Blasted out memes showing popular Nickelodeon characters on paper and pencil pads.

The fake lists included “screamsing about Trump,” “screamsing about Elon,” and “sitting in the office at once.”

The list concludes with “reading some emails” and “I cried out a little more about Trump and Elon.”

Mask shared the same image on Sunday x And with a Separate posts A “very basic pulse check” was called a question raised to federal workers.

However, one union, the United States Federation of Government Employees, denounced the request in a letter to the acting director of Charles Ezell, the representative director of the Personnel Management Office.

President Trump made a joke at the expense of federal labor using SpongeBob. Truthsocial / @RealdonaldTrump
Workers' union activists gather in support of federal workers during protests, showing signs to support federal workers in the background of Capitol Hill, Washington on February 11, 2025 . Reuters

“Employees believe they have no obligation to respond to this illegal email that has no other legal orientation,” wrote AFGE National President Everett Kelly, representing 800,000 workers. Masu.

Democrat Sen. Tina Smith, who represents Minnesota, was called “The Ultimate D-K Boss Moves Out of Mask” on social media Sunday.

“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 the boss of the billionaire hole, I'm on the side of the workers,” she writes.

Some agency leaders have instructed staff not to respond to, including the FBI, the Department of Defense and the Department of State.

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