A federal judge ordered the efficiency of the government with tech billionaire Elon Musk, making all internal records public, and writing justification for his decision to prun the federal agency in the first seven weeks of the Trump administration, remove contracts, and fire thousands of government workers.
On Wednesday, US District Judge Tanya Chukkan gave the wealthiest man living for three weeks to comply with a discovery order that requires him to answer questions about Doge's internal work and take over all relevant documents, according to filings.
Chukkan's decision responded to a group of 14 Democratic attorney generals who jointly sued Doj and Tesla CEOs, claiming Musk and his military forces, tasked with sorting out his federal spending, were using “unchecked powers.”
suitwhich was filed with the DC on February 13th, Musk authorities argue that a Senate confirmation is necessary under the constitutional appointment provisions.
“Mr. Musk has not occupied a US office and has not been appointed to an office confirmed by the Senate,” the lawsuit allegedly accused.
“Therefore, his executive level actions are unconstitutional.”
The 47th president tapped Musk, 53, as a “special government employee.” This, despite its name, is not a federal department, but a temporary organisation, which discovered and eliminated what the Trump administration calls futile government spending, fraud and abuse.
But opponents have expressed concern that Mask was not elected by Americans, but has changed administrative agencies and fired thousands of federal workers without Congressional approval.
Trump, 78, had called for efforts to “dismantle government bureaucracy, reduce excessive regulations, reduce wasteful spending and restructure federal agencies,” as a “Manhattan project.”
Since then, Tech Mogul's team has run Roughshod to staff at the Treasury and the US International Development Agency, cancelling grants to the Department of Education's left-wing organizations, and auditing them at the Department of Labor and other agencies.
Musk and his protests over government cuts erupted at Tesla dealers nationwide. Shares of electric car makers are falling sharply as the company faces massive boycotts.
Attacks on vehicles and charging stations, including Arsons and other vandalism, have also been reported.
Trump responded to the backlash by vowing to buy a red Tesla A to support his “incredible patriot.” The chief's commander was also known as an arsonist targeting domestic terrorists at the automobile company.
This week's founder of SpaceX also suffered from an 11-digit drop, causing his social media company X to be hit by a cyber attack.
Chukkan, appointed by former President Barack Obama, said her orders do not apply to Trump, who is exempt from answering written questions or documents requests.





