UPDATE (February 7, 2024, 3:41 p.m. ET): This post has been updated to include additional quotes and developments from the White House.
One of the first dramatic controversies surrounding the Trump administration, Elon Musk and his “Department of Government Efficiency” unfolded unexpectedly in the U.S. Treasury Department, when surrogates for the billionaire Republican megadonor sought access to the federal government’s highly sensitive payment system.
A longtime career official tried to stop them and preserve the integrity of the system, but he ultimately resigned, clearing the way for the DOGE operation to gain access to the information it sought for reasons that went unexplained.
The move generated both tumult and litigation, and the latter has generated some preliminary results. But as the legal fights continue, it’s worth appreciating who, exactly, the “DOGE” operation deployed to the Department of the Treasury. The Wall Street Journal reported:
A key DOGE staff member who gained access to the Treasury Department’s central-payments system resigned Thursday after he was linked to a deleted social-media account that advocated racism and eugenics. Marko Elez, a 25-year-old who is part of a cadre of Elon Musk lieutenants deployed by the Department of Government Efficiency to scrutinize federal spending, resigned after The Wall Street Journal asked the White House about his connection to the account.
In one of his many offensive online postings, the young Musk surrogate wrote, “Just for the record, I was racist before it was cool.”
This was the guy, the White House’s “Department of Government Efficiency” sent to Department of the Treasury, as part of an operation that gave “DOGE” access to a highly sensitive payment system known as the federal government’s “checkbook.”
Scott Bessent, the Trump administration’s treasury secretary, told Bloomberg News this week that he has confidence in the personnel Musk has sent to his agency. “These are highly trained professionals,” Bessent declared.
One of these “highly trained professionals” was a 25-year-old staffer who wrote on social media, “You could not pay me to marry outside of my ethnicity,” and “Normalize Indian hate.”
Unexpectedly, however, the day after Elez departed the White House team, his future prospects started evolving. On Friday morning, for example, Musk ran an online poll on his social media platform, seeking feedback on whether Elez should be brought back.
Soon after, JD Vance weighed in with a tweet of his own. “I obviously disagree with some of Elez’s posts, but I don’t think stupid social media activity should ruin a kid’s life,” the vice president wrote. “We shouldn’t reward journalists who try to destroy people. Ever. … I say bring him back.”
Not long after that, at a White House press conference, Trump endorsed Vance’s line.
Trump says he agrees with Vance that a DOGE staffer fired after being outed for making extremely racist posts should be brought back








