About a month after Donald Trump won a second term, as Republican hype surrounding the so-called Department of Government Efficiency reached absurd levels, Punchbowl News’ Jake Sherman, an MSNBC contributor, spoke to a senior GOP aide with low expectations.
Referring to Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, then the chairs of the fake “department,” the congressional staffer said: “Two people who know nothing about how the government works pretending they can cut a trillion dollars, both with decent pulpits to preach from, and the ear of an unpredictable president? Disaster.”
Seven weeks later, the relevance of that prediction continues to linger — because things could be better in DOGE Land.
As this week got underway, for example, Ramaswamy resigned from the advisory panel, and according to multiple reports, his colleagues weren’t exactly sad to see him leave. A few days later, as The Wall Street Journal reported, the fake “department” suffered another major departure.
The top lawyer at Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency said he is leaving just days after President Trump’s return to the White House. Bill McGinley, whom Trump appointed as DOGE’s legal counsel in December, is in discussions with several large companies to return to the private sector.
The lawyer confirmed his departure in an interview with the Journal, emphasizing that he remains supportive of the president and his agenda.
If McGinley’s name sounds at all familiar, it’s because Trump announced in December that the Republican lawyer would serve as the next White House counsel. Four weeks later, for reasons that were not disclosed to the public, Trump changed his mind, demoted McGinley and dispatched him to the DOGE endeavor — which McGinley is now leaving, just days after the new president’s inauguration.
Making matters worse, it’s not the only challenge facing the initiative:








