GOP Senators Trade Constitutional Authority For Elon’s Phone Number

from the government-by-dialing-elon dept

Republican Senators are so aware that Elon Musk is literally running the government now that they’re getting his personal cell phone number to beg him to reverse his mistakes. This would be concerning enough on its own — but it’s especially alarming given that just weeks ago, the DOJ explicitly claimed in court that Musk has no authority whatsoever over DOGE or government decisions.

The stark contradiction between what’s happening and what the DOJ claimed came into sharp focus last week when the Washington Post reported that Republican Senators were literally getting Musk’s personal phone number to call him when they need his DOGE team to “get problematic cuts reversed quickly.”

Yes, this is how our government now works. Musk’s wrecking crew destroys stuff, and a select few Republican officials get to call him and plead with him to try to put broken things back together again, even as many of them are not easily restored.

This makes the DOJ’s recent court filings look particularly absurd. Just weeks ago, the DOJ filed an obviously laughably false thing in court claiming that Elon Musk had nothing to do with DOGE. Then, a week later, the White House suddenly claimed that someone named Amy Gleason was actually running DOGE, even though there were reports that many people working for DOGE had no idea that Gleason was their boss.

Everyone knew the Gleason thing was nonsense, and nobody (outside of the DOJ in court filings) even seems to want to pretend that Elon isn’t the one really running the show. Last week, at his address to Congress, Donald Trump said (notably, in front of about half of the Supreme Court Justices) that Elon was running DOGE, which is in direct contradiction to what Trump’s DOJ swore in court.

In court, the DOJ said:

The U.S. DOGE Service is a component of the Executive Office of the President. The U.S. DOGE Service Temporary Organization is within the U.S. DOGE Service. Both are separate from the White House Office. Mr. Musk is an employee in the White House Office. He is not an employee of the U.S. DOGE Service or U.S. DOGE Service Temporary Organization. Mr. Musk is not the U.S. DOGE Service Administrator.

But then, at the address to Congress, Trump basically admitted the DOJ lied to the court.

I have created the brand-new Department of Government Efficiency, DOGE. Perhaps you’ve heard of it. Perhaps. Which is headed by Elon Musk, who is in the gallery tonight.

Lawyers immediately alerted the court to this blatant contradiction, with lawyer Kel McClanahan leading the way, filing this fun “Notice of New Evidence.”

In support of their Motion for Expedited Discovery, Dkt. #20, Plaintiffs Jerald Lentini, Joshua Erlich, and National Security Counselors, Inc. hereby submit new evidence which conclusively demonstrates that expedited discovery is urgently needed to ascertain the nature of the Department of Government Efficiency and its relationship to the United States DOGE Service, of which Amy Gleason is the Acting Administrator. At approximately 9:46 PM, President Trump stated the following in his Joint Address to Congress:

To further combat inflation, we will not only be reducing the cost of energy, but will be ending the flagrant waste of taxpayer dollars. And to that end, I have created the brand new Department of Government Efficiency, DOGE. Perhaps you’ve heard of it. Perhaps. Which is headed by Elon Musk, who is in the gallery tonight.

Live: Donald Trump delivers speech to Congress, Assoc. Press (Mar. 4, 2025), at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEygBVr1neI

When the President directly contradicts his own DOJ’s court filing on national television, it’s more than just embarrassing – it’s a sign of how completely the constitutional structure of our government has broken down. The DOJ is supposed to represent the executive branch’s legal positions truthfully to the courts. Instead, we have the department filing demonstrably false statements while the President openly admits the truth.

In any other administration, this would be a massive, ongoing, frontpage crisis. With Trump, it’s yet another story that is covered for a day and forgotten.

Either way, the story is only getting dumber. The Washington Post explains exactly how Republican Senators are so aware that Elon Musk is literally running the government now that this is happening:

Musk told a group of Republican senators in a closed-door lunch that he wanted to set up a direct line for them when they have questions about DOGE, allowing them to get a near-instant response to their questions and concerns about his group, senators said.

Some senators were given Musk’s phone number, and the entrepreneur said he would “create a system where members of Congress can call some central group” to get problematic cuts reversed quickly, said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina).

This is crazy on multiple levels. First, the Constitution explicitly gives Congress, not an unelected tech billionaire, the power over government spending and agency oversight. Having senators beg Musk to reverse his decisions doesn’t just invert the Constitution, it makes a mockery of it.

Second, if Musk is making so many mistakes that they need to have his number to call in case of emergencies, that suggests he shouldn’t be in this job. The fact that senators are treating this as normal — setting up an emergency hotline to an advisor with literally no authority to do anything, rather than exercising their own authority — shows just how far we’ve strayed from basic principles of democratic governance.

It shows that literally all of them know he has no clue what he’s doing. If you want to cut, there are ways to make cuts that don’t involve having to rapidly roll back your cuts (and we’ve already seen that not only is Musk making massive, catastrophic, unfixable mistakes, but also when he claims they’re reversing those mistakes, that’s not actually happening in some cases).

And, again, in that very same DOJ court filing where the court was told Musk has no role with DOGE, it also said he has no authority to make decisions and can only advise:

In his role as a Senior Advisor to the President, Mr. Musk has no greater authority than other senior White House advisors. Like other senior White House advisors, Mr. Musk has no actual or formal authority to make government decisions himself. Mr. Musk can only advise the President and communicate the President’s directives.

If he’s not running DOGE and has no authority… then why would Senators need to call Musk directly to get things fixed?

So this latest news makes it clear that literally everyone in the government knows that, contrary to what the DOJ claimed in court, Musk is running DOGE and has free control over nearly every aspect of the federal government. Of course, that just confirms that what Musk is doing violates the Appointments Clause (among many other things).

And, really, Republican elected officials need to find whatever spine they have and remind everyone what Congress’s role is, because this is one of the most pathetic statements ever by an elected official:

“With all due respect to Mr. Musk, he doesn’t have a vote up here. … [Give] courtesy to the members. They’re the ones that have to go home and defend these decisions, not you. So why don’t you give them a heads-up,” said Rep. Tom Cole (Oklahoma). “You are certainly complicating the lives of individual members, and you might be making some mistakes and hurting some innocent individuals in the process.”

Think about what Cole is actually saying here: A member of Congress — a co-equal branch of government with explicit constitutional authority over spending — is reduced to begging an unelected billionaire for the courtesy of advance notice before he dismantles government agencies and terminates federal employees. This isn’t just a problem — it’s a blaring constitutional crisis.

But it’s a solvable one if Congress just does its job.

The complete abdication of responsibility by Republican elected officials is particularly striking. These are legislators who routinely trumpet their constitutional authority and rail against unelected bureaucrats. Yet when faced with an unelected billionaire dismantling government agencies, they’re reduced to begging for advance notice of his decisions.

Consider Senator Boozman’s remarkably tepid response:

“I know he wants to make the government more efficient, but I do think we want to be informed as to what’s going on so when we’re asked about it we’re able to think about it and understand why and explain what the purpose is,” said Sen. John Boozman (Arkansas), who had never met Musk before the lunch.

This from a man who has spent a quarter century in Congress, over half of that in the Senate. Boozman knows — or should know — that Congress, not some big donor tech executive, has constitutional authority over government spending. His meek acceptance of Musk’s authority, asking only to be “informed” about decisions he should be making, represents a stunning surrender of congressional power.

And just the idea that any of this is made any better by Musk giving his mobile phone number to officials is bizarre. Beyond the constitutional absurdity, there are serious security implications. Is this Musk’s personal mobile phone? Is it a government phone? Is it secure? Is it compromised?

But, just take a step back here and put this in perspective. Even if you think that DOGE is actually uncovering some amazing waste, fraud, and abuse (it’s not) and that Musk is magically saving many billions in wasted taxpayer funds (he’s not), no system of government should work this way:

  1. Install a President deeply indebted to the world’s richest man
  2. Hand effective control of the entirety of the federal government to that same billionaire, who brings in inexperienced dipshit loyalists with sweeping access to sensitive data and unchecked power to dismantle federal programs
  3. Watch as Congress voluntarily surrenders its constitutional oversight role
  4. When the inevitable disasters occur, have elected Republicans (and, it appears, only Republicans) reduced to begging for the personal phone number of an advisor who the government swears has no authority, so they can plead for mercy and a reversal of decisions (only some of which are actually reversible).

It’s so stupid that if you wrote this up as a satirical Hollywood script, people would say it’s just too far out there. And yet, it’s the world we’re living in.

Speaking of “government-by-calling-Elon,” another report from last week involved an apparently hastily called cabinet meeting by Trump, after various (actually Senate approved) cabinet members were getting mad at Musk. And, once again, the answer seemed to be “hey, if you don’t like what I’m doing, call me.”

Mr. Duffy said the young staff of Mr. Musk’s team was trying to lay off air traffic controllers. What am I supposed to do? Mr. Duffy said. I have multiple plane crashes to deal with now, and your people want me to fire air traffic controllers?

Mr. Musk told Mr. Duffy that his assertion was a “lie.” Mr. Duffy insisted it was not; he had heard it from them directly. Mr. Musk, asking who had been fired, said: Give me their names. Tell me their names.

Mr. Duffy said there were not any names, because he had stopped them from being fired. At another point, Mr. Musk insisted that people hired under diversity, equity and inclusion programs were working in control towers. Mr. Duffy pushed back and Mr. Musk did not add details, but said during the longer back and forth that Mr. Duffy had his phone number and should call him if he had any issues to raise.

That’s right: When confronted with evidence that his team was trying to fire air traffic controllers during an aviation crisis, Musk’s response was essentially “just call me if there’s a problem.” This is how major policy decisions about aviation safety are now being made apparently — through casual phone calls to a tech billionaire with no official authority.

Seems like a problem?

The one thing about that meeting, though, is it shows that at least some of the cabinet is getting fed up with Musk. Indeed, the even larger story was that Musk and Rubio also clashed after Musk (again, with no authority) demanded Rubio fire a ton of people:

Seated diagonally opposite, across the elliptical mahogany table, Elon Musk was letting Mr. Rubio have it, accusing him of failing to slash his staff.

You have fired “nobody,” Mr. Musk told Mr. Rubio, then scornfully added that perhaps the only person he had fired was a staff member from Mr. Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.

Mr. Rubio had been privately furious with Mr. Musk for weeks, ever since his team effectively shuttered an entire agency that was supposedly under Mr. Rubio’s control: the United States Agency for International Development. But, in the extraordinary cabinet meeting on Thursday in front of President Trump and around 20 others — details of which have not been reported before — Mr. Rubio got his grievances off his chest.

To be fair, some reports suggest that Trump eventually told Musk to back off, saying cabinet members should have the authority here. But given Trump’s track record of occasionally saying the one thing to appease whoever is in front of him, before immediately reverting to whatever his biggest donor wants, it’s probably best not to get too excited about this particular moment of possible slight pushback on Musk.

The truth here is inescapable: we’ve allowed our constitutional system of checks and balances to be replaced by government-by-group-chat, where an unelected billionaire with no official authority wreaks havoc while elected officials desperately try to get him on the phone. The Republicans in Congress and the cabinet have both the constitutional authority and duty to stop this. Instead, they’re competing to get on Musk’s speed dial while he dismantles the institutions they swore to protect.

And that’s the real problem: It’s not just that Musk is overstepping — it’s that our constitutional officers are letting him. They have the power to stop this. They’re just choosing not to use it. Maybe someone should give them a call about that.

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Comments on “GOP Senators Trade Constitutional Authority For Elon’s Phone Number”

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55 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

One reason

The reason Republicans in congress are letting this happen is that they actually want to cut all of these programs. They don’t want their name associated with the cut so that they aren’t held accountable if the wrong program is cut.

Logically it is obvious that they are still accountable but this way they can have a scapegoat in Musk. The problem I see is that Musk will still never be held accountable.

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This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

He’s not “auditing the books”, though. He is cancelling funding that was already appropriated and approved by Congress, sometimes for no reason other than “it’s DEI because I said it’s DEI”. If he were “auditing the books”, he’d not only be a forensic accountant (he’s not), he’d be finding the actual fraud within the programs and purging that with a scalpel instead of purging whole programs with a sledgehammer. And if he had found actual fraud, he would be able to name and shame both the programs where that fraud was and/or the people who committed it.

You can piss on a Republican’s leg and tell them “Elon said it’s rain”. They’ll believe you because they’re too fucking scared to disagree. You won’t find people here willing to do the same because we’re not that scared and you’re not that convincing.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

There’s nothing these megalomaniacs can’t destroy for which Koby won’t make braindead excuses.

Impoverished children in Africa either will die or have already died thanks to USAID cuts made by Musk and his Twitler Youth. Koby would probably say that those kids shoulda lifted themselves up by their bootstraps and worked two jobs to pay the cost of living.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

And the aid those children could’ve received⁠—were receiving⁠—from the U.S. isn’t there any more, which means those diseases (in addition to starvation/malnutrition) will be allowed to kill those children en masse without anyone in the highest halls of the U.S. government giving a single shit.

Seriously, Elon “empathy is a weakness” Musk doesn’t care about any child that isn’t one of his own. And of those, he only really cares about the one he’s been using as a human shield.

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Koby (profile) says:

Re: Re:

cancelling funding that was already appropriated and approved by Congress

No, congress did not appropriate millions to make an Iraqi version of Sesame Street. The grant money in the USAID slush fund was not congressionally approved.

If he were “auditing the books”, he’d not only be a forensic accountant (he’s not), he’d be finding the actual fraud within the programs and purging that with a scalpel instead of purging whole programs with a sledgehammer.

He is performing a radical auditing system called Zero-Base Budgeting. The audit doesn’t assume that last year’s money was spent wisely, and will seek to spend it again, plus any funding increase. Rather, it presumes nothing, and thus $0 should be spent, unless the entities being examined can justify their continued operation.

By the way, this is why the bureaucracy dislikes the audit. Their operation was never supposed to be in question, but now it is.

So the audit is more than just tracking the money. If you ever saw the movie Office Space, then you know what it’s like. “What would ya say you do around here?” The government bureaucrats apparently don’t have much of an answer, besides insisting that they’re a “people person”.

It’s not a job for a scalpel. It’s not a misspent hotel stay here, or an unnecessary cell phone there. Entire programs within the U.S. government are unnecessary because they perform no useful function. So it’s okay to use the sledgehammer and a baseball bat on that copier machine!

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

He is performing a radical auditing system called Zero-Base Budgeting.

So what? It’s still a sledgehammer approach where a scalpel would be more useful. Musk, Trump, and many members of the GOP want to shrink the federal government at all costs⁠—and that includes human lives that might be saved by a more careful approach to “auditing” USAID beyond “cancel it all”.

Entire programs within the U.S. government are unnecessary because they perform no useful function.

And who told you this⁠—a man known for lying, a man who uses one of his sons as a human shield, a man so hateful that he effectively said his trans daughter is dead when she’s very much alive? What reason do you have to believe a man with such piss-poor credibility is telling you the truth besides his enormous wealth and his eugenicist bullshit aligning with your conservative leanings?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

He is performing a radical auditing system called Zero-Base Budgeting. The audit doesn’t assume that last year’s money was spent wisely, and will seek to spend it again, plus any funding increase. Rather, it presumes nothing, and thus $0 should be spent, unless the entities being examined can justify their continued operation.

So the definition of this “zero-base budgeting” is in fact purging entire programs first, but then learning afterwards what their actual functions are.

https://www.uniladtech.com/news/government-employees-return-work-fired-musk-doge-756560-20250306

This comment has been deemed funny by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

He is performing a radical [Elon vibes] system called [Zero-Chesterton Fencing]. The [Elon vibes don’t] assume that last [decade’s fences were built] wisely, and will seek to [maintain them], plus any [fence] increase. Rather, it presumes nothing, and thus [0 fences] should [stay up], unless the [wolf watchers] being examined can justify their continued operation.

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This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

We did. The Founding Fathers, and more than two centuries’ worth of lawmakers, never envisioned a man like Trump taking control of the system and rendering it irrelevant by cowing Congress and the Supreme Court into doing his bidding. Or lawmakers refusing to do what is right by impeaching a man like Trump for, say, inciting an insurrection. Or federal prosecutors refusing to go after a man like Trump for his numerous crimes out of fears of, for starters, partisan violence.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
drew (profile) says:

Re: Re:

We had the same problem in the UK during the Johnson era. The people who came up with the controls never envisaged:
a) a premier who would simply lie, lie, and lie again.
b) a media system that would allow this to go (effectively) unchallenged.
c) a party that would abandon its morals so abjectly.
d) a court system that would go along for the ride (didn’t happen in the UK but has plainly done so in the US).
and finally
e) an electorate that would vote for that candidate anyway, despite knowing all this.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

They also never envisioned the abolishment of slavery (except for the incarcerated), women being allowed to vote, the rapid expansion of the country by genocide of the natives, and purposely eschewed direct democracy for a republic.

And we’ve had several previews of just how spectacularly the systems could fail: Jackson, Harding, Nixon, Reagan, and the two Bushes.

But you and so many others keep putting so much faith into an idealized vision of what the country never was, you continue to be shocked by the inevitable. The most terrifying thing isn’t that the system is failing. It’s that the system is working exactly as it was intended.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

you and so many others keep putting so much faith into an idealized vision of what the country never was, you continue to be shocked by the inevitable

If I had faith in this country being a perfect multiracial democracy instead of⁠—and tell me when I’m telling lies⁠—a slave colony, a slave republic, a (brief) multiracial democracy, and an apartheid republic before becoming a far-from-perfect multiracial democracy (again) in 1965, I’d be a little more fucked up about Trump winning. (And yes, I got fucked up both times Trump won, but it took about a day to snap back to my senses and go “okay, I can survive this”.) Someone like Trump was bound to come along thanks to the general direction of the Republican Party since the Civil Rights Movement. Trump was simply in the right spot at the right time to capitalize on the hate towards Barack Obama and turn himself into a populist hero for the racist segment of the U.S. population.

I’m under no illusions that this country has ever been anything but deeply imperfect. Hell, I’m the one who keeps reminding people that the Founding Fathers kept slaves (and Thomas Jefferson provably raped one of his). I still believe this country can be better⁠—but it’s going to get a hell of a lot worse before that can happen.

the system is working exactly as it was intended

And that’s what sucks about Democrats: Most of them would rather keep the status quo than improve things somewhat because many of them still believe in bipartisanship and other such idealistic nonsense. The Ratchet Effect is real⁠—and until the Dems start chasing votes from actual leftists instead of votes from people who will always vote Republican instead of Diet Republican, it’s never going to stop being a thing until it’s too late to save the country.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
NotTheMomma (profile) says:

The Republican Congress is not alone in their lack of spines

Short of a few members of the house and senate, Democrats are just saying that there is nothing they can do. They say that they are fighting, but there is nothing they can do. The lack luster of the DNC leadership is just an obvious attempt to guilt voters for not voting for them so they have power to do nothing of note still.

We need more like Bernie, Raskin, AOC, etc to start getting behind others to replace these idiots that are just there to collect alms for the poor people that aren’t billionaires yet.

Teka says:

Re:

I keep hearing the outrage at Democrats, but what power does a party hold when they are a minority opposition to a group that is willing to goose-step in line or at least willing to cower and pretend they don’t see anything wrong.

Go to the FBI? Complain to the attorney general? The Supreme court? We seem to be down to “be annoying in meetings” or “complain on TV”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

They’re already salivating at the prospect of using more executive powers in the future since Trump has proven no one will try to stop anyone from using them, no matter how questionable they are.

Everything in protest of it has always been just theater. Just look back to Obama and his about-face on the promises of upholding the 4th amendment.

Tanner Andrews (profile) says:

Re: full and topped off

[Dems] say that they are fighting, but there is nothing they can do

They are in fact full of a substance sometimes noted for its odor.

House Dems blew their opportunity on the oversight committee. At least they can still vote “no” as a bloc on any proposed bills, allowing the Rs to own whatever they do — if Mike Johnson can get all the Rs lined up in a row to pass it.

Senate Dems have been looking for spines, but unfortunately they are on back-order. Until a new shipment arrives, no fillibuster for you. Just a bit of meek complaining and occasional ineffective “no” votes.

Anonymous Coward says:

If he’s not running DOGE and has no authority… then why would Senators need to call Musk directly to get things fixed?

This seems like potentially the least damning thing here. Is it actually rare for senators to be in contact with presidential advisors? My first thought is that it seems kind of reasonable; perhaps more reasonable than every congressperson and senator having a direct line to the president.

cashncarry (profile) says:

Doing its job

I have noticed the phrase “if Congress just does its job” a number of times over recent weeks. And not just here on TechDirt.

But what can Congress actually do at this point? Even if those on the hill agreed to pass new laws designed to tie Musk’s hands, there are no guarantees that Trump wouldn’t just veto the laws. If you assume Trump would sign new laws or that Congress could muster the numbers for an override, then there’s the problem of enforcement and that would need the DoJ to resume normal service rather than misleading the courts. Then, assuming courts made decisions enforcing the new laws, there are no guarantees that Musk and co wouldn’t continue ignoring any laws they don’t like. But even if we assume new laws could get on the books and be obeyed, that all takes a huge amount of time when everything is being wrecked on an hourly basis.

The only other thing I can think of that Congress could actually do would be a “nuclear option” of not passing appropriation bills and starving the beast. That kind of strategy takes time to plan and a willingness to strike at the opportune moment.

If there are other things that Congress can actually do that would have actual teeth and stop what’s going on, right now, it might be better to actually point out what strategies might work, explicitly, because, judging by the last couple of months, it sure as heck seems like Comgresscritters have no ideas either.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: They CAN act, they just choose not to

How about this one(and yes I’m aware they’d never do it):

‘Fire Elon or we impeach you as a clear and present danger to the country, and this time we’ll follow through.’

If they impeached him and striped him of the office then he would lose all semblance of legal authority as president, and while I strongly suspect he’d try to just ignore it the act of doing so would make crystal clear that nothing he says or orders from that point forward had any legal or constitutional backing.

That One Guy (profile) says:

'A bluff never called effectively becomes reality' in practice

This is crazy on multiple levels. First, the Constitution explicitly gives Congress, not an unelected tech billionaire, the power over government spending and agency oversight. Having senators beg Musk to reverse his decisions doesn’t just invert the Constitution, it makes a mockery of it.

This really cannot be emphasized or repeated often enough.

Everything Elon is doing is illegal.

All the damage he’s causing, all the ‘budget cuts’ and firings of staff, none of it has any legal basis, the reason it’s been working(and shockingly well at that) is that people are just accepting that if convicted felon Trump says he can do it that means that he can do it and accepting Elon’s orders rather than calling his bluff and refusing.

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