Rep. Nick Begich spoke to constituents at an open house earlier this week, and not surprisingly, the Alaska Republican was confronted by some suddenly unemployed constituents who’d been laid off from their federal jobs. One local resident, referring to the Trump administration’s cuts being implemented by the Department of Government Efficiency and Elon Musk, told the congressman, “I just don’t understand how these budget cuts are helpful to any Alaskans or their communities.”
The Alaskan added, “I’m just wondering what you plan to do about this.”
As an audio clip from Judd Legum’s Popular Information showed, Begich replied that he was “not in a position to approve or deny the cuts.”
To be sure, Begich is not the most powerful member on Capitol Hill. In fact, he was only sworn into office last month. But he is a member of Congress; Congress still has the power of the purse; and in a chamber with a vanishingly small House GOP majority, the freshman congressman has options he could try in pursuit of his goals. Begich, however, apparently feels powerless as the White House and Trump’s top campaign donor gradually dismantle the federal government.
There’s a lot of this sort of sentiment going around. In fact, the day after Begich told a constituent he’s “not in a position” to help, Sen. Chuck Grassley said roughly the same thing. The Iowa Republican, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Congress is effectively powerless in the face of DOGE’s cuts.
“Congress can’t do anything except complain,” the longest-serving GOP senator in American history declared.
Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee, added fresh comments to weeks’ worth of complaints about Musk and his dubious authority. Politico reported:
The senior Republican senator negotiating a deal to avoid a government shutdown in less than one month says the Trump administration might be breaking the law — and flouting the U.S. Constitution. As Elon Musk and the White House budget office seek to block spending that has already been approved by Congress, ‘I think it’s pretty clear that this violates Article I of the Constitution,’ said Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, the chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said in an interview.
The Maine Republican went on to say that if Musk, Trump, DOGE and the White House continue on their current trajectory, she would expect to “see lawsuits.” Collins added, “A lot of these issues are going to end up in court.”
That’s largely true. In fact, there are already all kinds of lawsuits, and the underlying questions are already being adjudicated in the courts.
But what members of Congress really ought to appreciate is that there are three branches of government; they serve in one of them; and there’s no reason the fight needs to be limited to the judiciary.








