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Here's a question that seems like it should have a straightforward answer but apparently doesn't: Who is the Administrator of USDS and DOGE? The Executive Order renaming USDS and establishing DOGE reads, in relevant part:
So USDS and the The DOGE Service Temporary Organization are headed by the same person and that person is the individual Agency Heads are supposed to work with to determine their DOGE Teams. There's been a bunch of reporting over the last few weeks about DOGE Teams arriving in various departments, so presumably this consultation has happened. Who was the consultation with? The obvious answer is "Elon Musk." Certainly everyone seems to assume he's in charge of DOGE. He (and Trump) talk like Musk is in charge of the effort. So much so that even Wikipedia lists Musk as the "Administrator of the Department of Government Efficiency." Case closed, right? Well, not so fast says the United States government. According to a sworn declaration by Joshua Fisher (Director of the Office of Administration):
That declaration comes from a filing in State of New Mexico v. Musk, where a bunch of U.S. States are suing Musk and DOGE for allegedly exercising the powers of a principal officer of the United States without Senate confirmation in violation of the Appointments Clause. You can read the filings in that link if you care about the arguments (I think they have a pretty good case, given the actions attributed to DOGE) but I want to focus on a more basic question: If Elon Musk is not the DOGE Administrator, then who is? The answer seems to be: nobody knows! Actual USDS employees who pre-date Trump seem unable to get an answer about who is running their agency. This culminated yesterday in a hearing where a federal judge asked a DOJ lawyer point blank “Is there an administrator of DOGE at the present time?” and the response was "I don’t know the answer to that."
This is crazy right? The executive order is pretty clear that DOGE has to have an Administrator and that Administrator is responsible for working with Agency Heads to determine DOGE employees for each Agency. Are none of the DOGE employees embedded at various agencies actually DOGE employees? Has the actual DOGE organization done nothing? That's certainly not how people who seem to be involved talk about it! Either DOGE has an Administrator and someone knows who or, I guess, every action every DOGE employee has taken has been unlawful?
ETA:
Of course, right after I post this the White House says Amy Gleason is DOGE Administrator.
The US Constitution has a zeroth article that says you're allowed to violate the whole thing and create entire branches of government out of thin air, but only if you're on the side of the bureaucracy. Barrack Obama can make up USDS, but you're not allowed to use it.
I mean who the hell can still believe that rule of law and separation of powers are anything but a joke at this point?
This is a weird reply. No one questions Trump's ability to create DOGE, only what powers the DOGE administrator can have. Did Obama's USDS administrator purport to be able to fire any government employee? Cancel federal government contracts? Impound congressionally appropriated funds? If Trump wants DOGE just to do the kind of thing previous USDS administrators have done that's fine, but clearly they want much more power. Power the constitution denies to officers not subject to senate confirmation.
How was Obama's head of USDS nominated and did that or did that not violate the Appointments Clause according to this line of argument?
They did not require senate confirmation and did not violate the Appointments clause. Part of the distinction about whether an officer is "inferior" or "principal" (and thus whether they require senate confirmation) turns on the authority they wield. If you want to create a purely advisory committee to figure out software best practices and help other government agencies bring their stuff up to date, no problem. If you want to create an entity that has the power to hire and fire people of different departments, order around other senate confirmed officials, cancel contracts, etc then you need senate confirmation.
My understanding of the setup from the EO was that DOGE just makes recommendations to the President and that it is he who hires and fires.
Has any DOGE employee actually done anything that doesn't amount to "give us this information so we can tell POTUS who to sack"?
According to some reporting DOGE employees are in control of all payments at USAID and denying disbursement of payments authorized by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. I am skeptical DOGE is going to be able to present any kind of communication from Trump authorizing any particular firing rather than purporting to give them discretion.
Congress can delegate their power to subordinate positions. Why can't the President?
Answer in two parts.
First, there are some powers which Congress is probably not able to delegate to subordinate positions. I think if Congress tried to establish an agency to determine the budget for the federal government for the upcoming year without a vote in Congress that would be struck down. Similarly certain powers (like the power to pardon) are specific to the office of the President and he probably can't delegate those. If he wants to empower an agency to advise him on the use of the power that's probably fine but there are likely certain powers he can't just give to other entities.
Second current law suggests that many actions taken by DOGE would be unlawful even if those actions ultimately issued from the President himself. Decisions about firing certain employees or impounding funds are governed by Congressional statutes, not just the president's whims. So even if the President could delegate certain powers it's not clear he has the powers to do the things he would be delegating.
ETA:
I guess there's a third thing which is that Supreme Court interpretation of the appointments clause also limits the power the President can delegate without the safeguard of Senate confirmation, which is probably the one most relevant here.
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