When Elon Musk named his government efficiency task force after a meme cryptocurrency, nobody should’ve been surprised. The man who tweets rocket launches and market-moving statements at 3 AM had convinced Donald Trump to let him reshape the federal government. DOGE—Department of Government Efficiency—was born from Mar-a-Lago meetings where Musk pitched consolidating 400-plus federal agencies into 99 or fewer. Trump ate it up, comparing it to the Manhattan Project. Because nothing says “splitting the atom” like naming your reform effort after an internet dog joke.
The whole thing existed on paper only, propped up by executive order with zero Congressional backing. Musk got the title of head, sort of. The White House called him a “senior adviser,” not an official administrator. Legal authority? None. Actual power? Debatable. Vivek Ramaswamy joined as co-lead, and together they promised to slash $2 trillion from federal spending—a number that exceeded the entire 2023 budget. Math was never their strong suit apparently.
By April 2025, they claimed $150 billion in savings. Fact-checkers called BS. Congressional members laughed. The advisory body couldn’t actually enforce anything, blocked by the same bureaucratic maze they wanted to demolish. They recommended killing agencies like USAID and posted constantly on social media about efficiency reforms. Their credit card audit pilot program across 14 civilian agencies and lease cancellations of vacant federal buildings increased savings from $100 million to 171 million, but these incremental wins paled against their trillion-dollar promises. Real change remained elusive.
Advisory body blocked by bureaucratic maze, posting efficiency reforms while real change remained elusive.
The political circus was predictable. Democrats screamed about executive overreach. Republicans split down the middle. The Congressional DOGE caucus formed, then immediately started fighting about tactics and results. Meanwhile, allegations of conflicts of interest swirled—shocking nobody who knew Musk still ran Tesla and SpaceX while playing government reformer. Back in May 2021, Musk had crashed Bitcoin’s price from nearly $58,000 to $43,000 with a single tweet about energy concerns, demonstrating his market-moving power.
Tesla stock bounced around like a pinball during Musk’s DOGE tenure, though it survived. SpaceX kept winning government contracts, because of course it did. The whole experiment became a case study in what happens when meme culture collides with federal governance.
The spectacular collapse wasn’t in market prices or agency closures. It was in credibility. DOGE promised transformative change, delivered glorified suggestions, and proved that running the government isn’t the same as running Twitter. Who could’ve seen that coming?