The Musk-Trump Pact Is Sealed In Bizarre Oval Office Circus

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

Commissar-in-Chief

In a bizarre and surreal Oval Office circus, Elon Musk and Donald Trump ratcheted up DOGE’s infiltration of the federal government.

The occasion was Trump signing a new executive order furthering seeding DOGE across government (except the military) and laying the groundwork for a new round of purges of the federal workforce.

The executive order lays out draconian and absurdist methods for extending the hiring freeze Trump previously ordered by, for example, limiting hiring to one employee for every four who depart.

But the true significance of the executive order was empowering DOGE, overseen by the world’s richest man, to have a key role in every department and agency. The result is an arrangement where Musk and his team operates as a layer superimposed between the White House and the rest of the federal government, positioning them as political enforcers in the style of the old Soviet commissars, as TPM’s Josh Marshall noted.

It still seems wildly improbable that the Musk-Trump pact survives for long with these two volatile and unstable personalities, but the damage they may do before they self-combust is almost unimaginable.

Elon Musk Watch

  • NYT: Elon Musk’s Business Empire Scores Benefits Under Trump Shake-Up
  • ProPublica: One Agency Tried to Regulate SpaceX. Now Its Fate Could Be in Elon Musk’s Hands.
  • NYT: Elon Musk’s Financial Disclosure Will Not Be Made Public

First Of All …

Reporter: You said an example of fraud that you have cited was $50 million of condoms was sent to Gaza but after a fact-check apparently it was Gaza in Mozambique meant to protect them against HIV.  Musk: First of all, some of the things I say will be incorrect

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— Acyn (@acyn.bsky.social) February 11, 2025 at 4:49 PM

Shoot Me Now

The Associated Press was not allowed to attend the Trump-Musk circus in the Oval Office as White House retaliation for the wire service not adopting Trump’s preferred moniker “Gulf of America” in its coverage.

Pay Attention To FEMA

The Trump administration sacked four FEMA employees and continues to freeze some of FEMA’s spending despite a court order blocking the freeze.

The Purge Continues …

In addition to the four sackings at FEMA:

  • USAID: The White House fired the USAID inspector general last night after he issued a report Monday warning of the impacts of the Trump administration’s unlawful dismantling of the independent agency.
  • MSPB: President Trump fired Cathy Harris, a Democratic member of the Merit Systems Protection Board.
  • DOJ: David Hubbert, a 40-year Justice Department employee who is now its chief tax official, is resigning rather than accept a forced transfer to a new unit, Bloomberg reports.
  • DOJ: Devin DeBacker, who the Trump administration installed as the acting head of the DOJ’s National Security Division, has been removed from that position after only a few weeks, ABC News reports.

Other Turmoil

  • CFPB: “Senior officials at the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau were forced to resign on Tuesday after the Trump administration effectively shut down all major operations at the once-powerful agency,” Semafor reports.
  • CFPB: Oopsie! Russell Vought, the acting head of the CFPB, was forced to restore one of its key functions before it tanked mortgage markets, David Dayen reports.
  • CISA: “The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency placed several members of its election security group on administrative leave last week,” CyberScoop reports.
  • ICE: Two top officials have been reassigned for allegedly failing to be sufficiently aggressive on deportations, WaPo reports.
  • SBA: Some probationary employees at the Small Business Administration have been terminated twice since Friday, Politico reports.

New Court Decisions Pushing Back On Trump

  • A federal judge in DC ordered health care information restored on the websites of HHS, CDC, and FDA.
  • The First Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the Trump administration’s appeal of the temporary restraining order blocking the OMB spending freeze.

Predictably Absurd Results

President Trump’s executive orders are generating ham-handed efforts at compliance, like keyword searches of government contracts and websites for terms that may evoke DEI or illegal immigration – but which may appear in many other unrelated contexts. In one example reported by CNN, a Commerce Department office was ordered to review its contracts for nearly 150 terms, including:

  • immigrant
  • undocumented
  • foreign assistance
  • Green New Deal
  • climate change
  • diversity
  • equity
  • racism
  • discrimination
  • transgender
  • LGBT
  • abortion
  • pregnant
  • birth control
  • fetus

Durbin Claims Kash Patel Involved In FBI Purge

Senate Judiciary ranking member Dick Durbin (D-IL) is claiming that FBI director nominee Kash Patel has been involved in the purges of the FBI and that during his confirmation hearing misled senators about his involvement.

The Shockwaves Reverberate At DOJ

The acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan still hasn’t publicly moved to dismiss the criminal case against NYC Mayor Eric Adams as she was ordered to to do by Main Justice:

Danielle Sassoon, a longtime federal prosecutor whom Trump elevated to be the Manhattan U.S. attorney, is left with few options: to follow the Justice Department directive, to defy the order, or to resign, former prosecutors said. To obey the order would be an unprecedented blow to the Manhattan office’s prized independence from Washington. If she resigned or were fired, the Justice Department could handpick her successor.

Quote Of The Day

“Our founders were hellbent on ensuring that we didn’t have a monarchy, and the first way they thought of that was to give Congress the power of the purse.”–Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, speaking generally about the constitutional structure

Bannon Pleads Guilty

MAGA majordomo Steve Bannon has pleaded guilty to state charges in the We Build the Wall fraud case. As part of the plea agreement, he avoids jail time. The original federal case against Bannon was wiped away with a Trump pardon in 2021. Upon leaving the courthouse yesterday, Bannon called on Attorney General Pam Bondi to begin an immediate criminal investigation into New York Attorney General Leticia James and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

We Live In The Dumbest Timeline

Rep. Buddy Carter (R-Georgia) has introduced a bill to "authorize the President to enter into negotiations to acquire Greenland"—and to rename Greenland as "Red, White, and Blueland." “America is back and will soon be bigger than ever with the addition of Red, White, and Blueland,” Carter said.

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— Anna Bower (@annabower.bsky.social) February 11, 2025 at 12:13 PM

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Not Hyperbole Anymore: Musk Is In Charge of the US Government

These are wild times at TPM because they’re wild times in the American government. It’s hard to keep up with everything happening from one moment to the next. I had not had a chance to look at the new DOGE executive order the President signed this afternoon with Elon Musk standing beside him. I don’t think it’s too much to say that it puts Musk functionally in control of the U.S. government. I know that sounds pretty wild. And that may not apply to high-profile policy — two budget bills or one on Capitol Hill, plans for Gaza. But let me explain what it does.

Continue reading “Not Hyperbole Anymore: Musk Is In Charge of the US Government”

Trump & Co Decide Individual Federal Judges Do Have Too Much Power After All 

It’s no surprise that an expanding group of federal district judges, appointed by presidents of both parties, are systematically blocking President Trump’s and Elon Musk’s power grabs. This is, after all, how the system works. 

Continue reading “Trump & Co Decide Individual Federal Judges Do Have Too Much Power After All “

Durbin Implores Senate GOP To ‘Pause’ On Patel Amid Claims He Covertly Managed FBI Purge

Senate Judiciary Committee ranking member Dick Durbin (D-IL) doubled down on his claim that Kash Patel personally orchestrated a “purge” of senior law enforcement officials within the bureau and implored his colleagues to “pause” consideration of Patel’s nomination during a speech on the Senate floor Tuesday. 

“Multiple whistleblowers have disclosed to my staff highly credible information indicating that Mr. Kash Patel has been personally directing the ongoing purge of senior law enforcement officials at the FBI,” Durbin said Tuesday. 

Continue reading “Durbin Implores Senate GOP To ‘Pause’ On Patel Amid Claims He Covertly Managed FBI Purge”

Gaming Out Going Head to Head with the Trumpist Scourge

I want to take a moment to address a few questions I’ve gotten about a potential standoff between congressional Democrats and President Trump over the DOGE wilding gangs he’s allowing to run free through the executive branch. The most frequent and very reasonable question is: Let’s say Trump agrees to a deal of some sort. How do you enforce the agreement? More specifically, after Democrats help pass either a continuing resolution or a debt ceiling hike, what prevents Trump from reneging on the deal a week later after the Democrats have ceded their leverage?

Let me answer this on two levels, the first attitudinal and the second concrete. If I were in such a negotiation and the person on the other side of the table absolutely needed what only I can give I’d say, you figure that out. You need me. I don’t need you. So you come up with something binding, some mechanism that doesn’t require me to trust you. If it seems meaningfully binding to me, cool. Then we can talk. Otherwise find your own votes. I’ve never been involved in a negotiation beyond the finances of a tiny perpetually cash strapped small business. But those were always hugely important negotiations to me. And this is always the position I’ve taken when the person on the other side needed or wanted something more than we did. The fundamental issue in any negotiation, especially adversarial negotiations, is properly assigning whose problem it is.

So how do you make sure Trump doesn’t renege on the deal? His problem to figure that out because he’s the one who wants the deal. Never get fooled into taking on a problem that isn’t yours.

Continue reading “Gaming Out Going Head to Head with the Trumpist Scourge”

Trump Is Predictably Sloppy And It’s Hurting Him In Court

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

Clean Up On Aisle 47

Before we get into the latest legal developments in the wide-ranging effort to defend the rule of law and the constitutional order against President Trump’s attacks, a quick word on how sloppy the Trump White House has been.

Overnight, the Justice Department had to file two separate corrections in pending court cases to clean up misstatements of fact they made to federal judges in open court. It’s an excruciating thing for any lawyer to have to do, but especially for the Justice Department which has prided itself on being a reliable narrator and has earned, for better or worse, the benefit of the doubt in federal court.

The impact and significance of the admitted errors isn’t entirely clear yet, but they undermine the Justice Department’s credibility and make it clear to the judges involved that these are not careful, considered, prudent government actions that deserve to be treated as regular or normal.

In the Treasury-DOGE case, the Justice Department now says it was mistaken when it told the court that since-resigned DOGE associate Marko Elez was a special government employee. He was in fact a Treasury Department employee.

In the USAID case, the Justice Department admitted it was wildly wrong when it told the court that 500 employees were placed on leave. The actual number was 2,140. It also mistakenly told the court that only future USAID contracts had been frozen when in fact existing contracts had been frozen as well.

The pace of the destruction unleashed by the White House combined with its disorganization, its ham-handedness, and the lack of involvement from lawyers at the front end has created an enormous mess for the Justice Department to try to clean up in real time in court. It’s not been pretty.

Trump being sloppy and non-strategic is neither new nor a surprise, but it might provide an opening to fend off some of his worst actions in his first three weeks in office.

Judge: White House Failed To Comply With Order

U.S. District Judge John J. McConnell Jr. (Rhode Island) found that the Trump White House was not complying with his order that blocked OMB’s funding freeze. At issue was the failure of funds to resume flowing in full. The judge reiterated his original order and singled out the funding of the National Institutes of Health and the Inflation Reduction Act to make sure it was clear that they were included in his order.

Still, reporting as recently as this morning has continued to suggest funds are being held up under the original OMB freeze:

  • Popular Information: Trump maintains funding freeze at NIH, defying court order
  • ProPublica: The Courts Blocked Trump’s Federal Funding Freeze. Agencies Are Withholding Money Anyway.

The Trump administration has appealed the TRO, even though they are not typically appealable.

Court Blocks NIH Funding Freeze

In a separate lawsuit in Massachusetts, U.S. District Judge Angel Kelley blocked the Friday change to the funding formula at NIH that so alarmed scientists, researchers, and universities.

Judge Orders Watchdog Reinstated

U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson (DC) ordered Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger immediately reinstated to his job after he was quietly fired by President Trump on Friday night. The special counsel enforces federal whistleblower laws and the Hatch Act. The Trump administration appealed the judge’s ruling even though the temporary administrative stay she issued is typically not appealable.

Trump II Clown Show

  • President Trump posted on social media that former acting DNI Ric Grenell is going to be the Kennedy Center’s interim executive director … except that the Kennedy Center doesn’t have an executive director position and it’s not clear on what authority, if any, the president is relying on to intervene directly in Kennedy Center affairs.
  • WaPo: The 19-year-old Musk surrogate known online as “Big Balls” takes on news roles as a senior adviser at State and DHS.
  • WSJ: Meet Steve Davis, the Musk deputy running DOGE.

The DOGE Raid On CFPB

Bloomberg (emphasis added):

Then, late Friday night, the DOGE staffers were granted access to all the CFPB’s data systems, including sensitive bank examination and enforcement records, according to five people familiar with the matter and emails seen by Bloomberg News. The people asked not to be identified, citing concerns over potential retribution. By Sunday, the agency was a skeleton, with its funding limited and activities suspended.

Quote Of The Day

“We are in the midst of a constitutional crisis right now. There have been so many unconstitutional and illegal actions in the first 18 days of the Trump presidency. We never have seen anything like this.”–Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the law school at UC Berkeley, speaking Friday

Public Corruption Has Never Had It So Good

The new developments at the Justice Department aren’t merely warning signs, they don’t just “raise questions,” and they do not simply portend bad things to come. They are the bad things, and they are happening right now. This is it. This is the eye of the storm we warned about:

  • Eric Adams: In a historically corrupt move, the Justice Department has ordered federal prosecutors in Manhattan to drop the public corruption case against NYC Mayor Eric Adams.
  • READ: Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove’s atrocious memo ordering the acting U.S. attorney in Manhattan to drop the Adams case, while admitting the decision was made “without assessing the strength of the evidence or the legal theories on which the case is based.”
  • FBI Purge: “The Trump administration has asked the FBI for a list of probationary employees and individual justifications for keeping anyone who has been at the bureau for less than two years, sparking a new round of fears within a bureau that has been rocked by the first three weeks of Donald Trump’s presidency.”–NBC News

In related news, President Trump pardoned disgraced former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D).

Corruption For America AND The World

When I saw initial reports that President Trump had issued a new executive order pulling back on enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, I had a notion that it would deprioritize it in favor of immigration enforcement or some such. But no! It’s a full-throated attack on the statute that is a cornerstone of anti-corruption efforts worldwide, bemoaning how it puts American business at a competitive disadvantage.

Trump halted all new FCPA enforcement for six months (with an option to extend for another six months) and ordered a review of all pending FCPA cases. But the kicker was in Trump’s description of bribery and other corrupt activity as “routine business practices in other nations” and his lament that the FCPA is an “excessive barrier” to U.S. commerce.

Trump Still Extorting Ukraine

President Trump claims he has demanded $500 billion in “rare earth” from Ukraine as compensation for U.S. aid to fend off the Russian invasion. “Otherwise, we’re stupid. I said to them we have to — ‘we have to get something. We can’t continue to pay this money,’” Trump said.

Hegseth Is On The Loose At The Pentagon

  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is renaming Ft. Liberty back to Ft. Bragg, but the “Bragg” now refers not to the Confederate general it was originally named for but to an obscure Army private first class who fought in World War II.
  • In an order Friday but not made public until Monday, Hegseth blocked transgender Americans from joining the military and halted gender-affirming care for current service members.
  • President Trump ordered the immediate dismissals of the boards of visitors for all four military service academies.
  • In response to President Trump’s anti-DEI executive order, the Defense Department has begun banning certain books in its school system serving military families.

PBS Under Pressure

PBS shutters its DEI office, forcing two DEI executives to leave. Bari Weiss’ Free Press suggests the move came after it contacted PBS about a tip it received from a “high-ranking” PBS executive that the public broadcaster was planning to move the two executives to a different department to “skirt” Trump’s DEI executive order.

What Can Be Done?

Civil rights lawyer Sherrilyn Ifill, on setting realistic expectations and saving enough of the foundational bricks of democracy to be able to rebuild in the future:

The truth is that we will NOT be able to stop every terrible thing that this administration seeks to do. Elections really do have consequences – as many of us tried with tremendous urgency to make clear last year. But we can slow things down, win some battles, throw sand in the gears of others. If we save some lives, some jobs, some critical government agencies, some measure of press freedom, some medical and subsistence benefits, academic freedom for some schools and universities, and protect the dignity, safety and constitutional rights of some of our most vulnerable fellow Americans, it will be worth it.

And it will be from whatever remainder of democratic structure, values, and policies we are able to protect that we will have the space and platform on which to do the work of building an urgently needed new democracy in our country. So our fight today is worth it.

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Need Your Help With Something

Yesterday the Bulwark posted a very interesting article which showed that while basically every Republican is bowing down to the High Lord Elon in Washington, they’re singing at least a slightly different tune in letters to constituents in their states and districts. The Bulwark rightly notes that this suggests a nascent discomfort with the headlines Musk’s operation is creating, enough that even some pretty stalwart Republicans are reacting to it. The Bulwark received letters which readers had sent in from twelve different members of Congress and published four of them — from Sen. John R. Curtis of Utah, Rep. Daniel Webster of Florida, Rep. Mike Flood of Nebraska, and Sen. Deb Fischer of Nebraska. The members are certainly not turning on Musk. But it’s not the standard DC “sucks to be you” discourse we’re seeing in Washington. The letters say they’re monitoring the situation closely to make sure there are no conflicts of interest. They’re particularly sensitive to reports of people’s private information being compromised. A number of them say clearly that Musk is only making recommendations and that Congress will have the final say about spending.

Continue reading “Need Your Help With Something”

Cowed Republican Senators Now Worried About Primary Challenges Backed By Trump OR Musk

There is new reporting in The Hill today that suggests that the threat of primary challengers against Senate and House Republicans who don’t keep their heads down amid Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s assault on the federal government is very much alive and well — and that the threat is acutely felt by the senators themselves.

Continue reading “Cowed Republican Senators Now Worried About Primary Challenges Backed By Trump OR Musk”

Judge Finds Admin Not Complying With Court Order After Musk, Vance Rail Against Judiciary

It’s quite a split screen: The president, vice president, White House deputy chief of staff and unelected co-president publicly goad each other on to ignore a judge’s order, which would usher in a full-blown constitutional crisis. 

Meanwhile, the Trump Justice Department on Sunday took up nearly a whole page in a short filing to assure a federal judge that it’s in full compliance with that same order, despite vehemently disagreeing with it. 

Continue reading “Judge Finds Admin Not Complying With Court Order After Musk, Vance Rail Against Judiciary”

How Interpret Schumer’s ‘Dear Colleague’ Letter

I’ve written clearly a few times that Democrats have one key leverage point with a plausible shot of ending the spree of criminal and unconstitutional conduct Trump has unleashed through the federal government. That comes with the expiration of the current “continuing resolution” which funds the government along with the need to again raise the debt ceiling. I’ve argued that Democrats’ position needs to be this: no discussions, no negotiations until the law breaking stops. After that, if there is an after that, they can negotiate on actual budgetary issues, but not before.

Today Sen. Schumer sent out a “Dear Colleague” letter to his caucus setting forth Senate Democrats’ position. Congressional leaders put these out as a combination of advice and guidance to members as well as public messaging. Politico and I assume others are interpreting the letter as taking that budgetary cudgel off the table. They have good reason to interpret it that way. Schumer makes no mention of the condition I note above. He says: “Democrats stand ready to support legislation that will prevent a government shutdown. Congressional Republicans, despite their bluster, know full well that governing requires bipartisan negotiation and cooperation.”

Continue reading “How Interpret Schumer’s ‘Dear Colleague’ Letter”