Elon Musk’s destructive DOGE operation is setting its sights on the Internal Revenue Service, and things are already looking dicey. There are reports that sensitive taxpayer information could be misused, and that potential cuts to the IRS’s workforce could cause a headache for taxpayers this tax season — as well as serve as an unexpected gift to rich tax dodgers.
According to NBC News, an IRS employee affiliated with the so-called Department of Government Efficiency is “expected to seek access” to the Integrated Data Retrieval System, which “contains information such as taxpayers’ individual master files, taxpayer identification numbers, retirement account information and details on pending adoptions.”
In addition to the odd and concerning intrusions into personal databases, the prospect of possible mass layoffs at the IRS is also bad news.
The Washington Post reported that “IDRS access is extremely limited — taxpayers who have had their information wrongfully disclosed or even inspected are entitled by law to monetary damages.” Citing three people familiar with internal agency deliberations at the IRS, the Post noted that “the request for DOGE access has raised deep concern within the IRS,” as it is “highly unusual to grant political appointees access to personal taxpayer data, or even programs adjacent to that data.”
Nina Olson, the former head of the IRS’s internal consumer watchdog, told the Post: “The information that the IRS has is incredibly personal. Someone with access to it could use it and make it public in a way, or do something with it, or share it with someone else who shares it with someone else, and your rights get violated.”
White House spokesperson Harrison Fields defended the access controversy by saying that “waste, fraud, and abuse have been deeply entrenched in our broken system for far too long” and “it takes direct access to the system to identify and fix it.” But it’s not clear how a lone software engineer will do that, and it doesn’t address the breach of norms.
In addition to the odd and concerning intrusions into personal databases, the prospect of possible mass layoffs at the IRS is also bad news. Two sources familiar with the IRS’s plans told The Associated Press that the agency is expected to lay off thousands of probationary workers in the middle of tax season. Probationary status refers to how recently someone was hired for a new position, and across the federal government it typically takes one to two years for a worker for full civil protections to take effect for them.








