Elon Musk regrets creating and leading the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, he said on former Trump administration official Katie Miller’s podcast.
“Instead of doing DOGE, I would have basically built, worked on my companies, essentially,” Musk said, in response to a question from Miller about whether he would lead DOGE again knowing what he knows now.
“And they wouldn’t have been burning the cars,” Musk said on the episode that aired Tuesday night, seemingly referring to protests at Tesla dealerships during his reign in Washington.
The billionaire is a founder and leader of Tesla, SpaceX, Neuralink and The Boring Company. He also leads the social media company X, formerly known as Twitter, after buying the platform in 2022.
Musk also offered a muted assessment of DOGE’s success. “We were a little bit successful. We were somewhat successful,” he told Miller. “I mean, we stopped a lot of funding that really just made no sense, that was just entirely wasteful.”
He claimed that DOGE stopped “$100 [billion], maybe $200 billion of zombie payments per year.” DOGE’s website also claims it saved an estimated $214 billion.
But Musk and other DOGE officials have long exaggerated the amount of savings engineered by the unofficial agency. An August Politico analysis of the publicly available data found that, of the $143 billion DOGE claimed to have saved by July, only $1.4 billion had actually been recovered.
Miller’s podcast was friendly turf for Musk, as it has been for the handful of administration officials who have appeared on the show, including Vice President JD Vance, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. Miller was a former adviser to DOGE, and held several roles in President Donald Trump’s first administration. She is married to Stephen Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff for policy and Homeland Security adviser.








