The Government Efficiency Chopping Block

The programs without separate spending authorization that Ramaswamy would do away with represent more than $516 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The 10 largest make up $380 billion. Here’s a look at what some of those programs do (click on picture to enlarge).

I am not sure why the dynamic duel of Muske and Ramaswamy would have issues with veterans; but they do. I like many of the other veterans do have healthcare issues, healthcare issues which are related to our time in the military. Yet both they and Trump see us as the issue. Maybe they should have served? Anyway, the Washington Post had an article on the topic with the VA being the target.

“We can & should save hundreds of billions each year by defunding government programs that Congress no longer authorizes,” Ramaswamy wrote.

The approach from President-elect Donald Trump, Musk and Ramaswamy’s out-of-government “Department of Government Efficiency,” or DOGE, demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of Congress and federal spending, experts say.

Though Ramaswamy suggested that programs Congress no longer authorizes are prime targets for cuts, in reality, many programs where Congress has let authorization lapse are covered by funding bills thatpolicy wonks call “self-authorizing.”

It just might be more difficult than DOGE’s backers suggest.

“It is obviously important for the government to be good stewards of taxpayer dollars. There’s real bipartisan areas where people agree there’s stuff to be done. But what Elon and Vivek and Trump are going for is not that,” said Bobby Kogan, an analyst at the center-left think tank Center for American Progress. “They don’t even get the basics right, get the size of the budget wrong, and named it after a meme. In no way are they actually taking this seriously.”

Trump transition officials did not immediately return a request for comment.

The programs without separate spending authorization that Ramaswamy would do away with represent more than $516 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The 10 largest make up $380 billion.