Thursday, February 20, 2025

Trump Considering Returning 20 Percent of DOGE Savings to Americans

Trump Considering Returning 20 Percent of DOGE Savings to Americans

President Donald Trump on Wednesday said his administration is considering returning 20% of savings identified by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) initiative to Americans, echoing a proposal made on social media site X.

Speaking at a meeting of global financiers and tech executives hosted by Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund in Miami, Trump said he is also considering using another 20% of the savings to pay down the federal government's debt.

"There's even under consideration a new concept, where we give 20% of the DOGE savings to American citizens, and 20% goes to paying down debt," Trump said in Miami.

The proposal originally came from businessman James Fishback, who on Tuesday posted a four-page memo on X suggesting a "DOGE dividend."

The post caught the attention of Musk, who responded: "Will check with the President."

Fishback, the CEO of Azoria Partners investment firm, is now in touch with the Trump administration over his proposal, a source aware of the conversations told Reuters on Wednesday.

Fishback's memo suggests slicing 20% from DOGE's savings, or what Fishback said would amount to $400 billion, in order to send a $5,000 check to all tax-paying households after DOGE's scheduled end in July 2026.

That calculation stems from DOGE achieving $2 trillion in savings, which Musk has described as a "best-case outcome" with $1 trillion the goal.

Musk's cost-cutting effort has so far pared hundreds of relatively small contracts that it says have saved U.S. taxpayers $8.5 billion, according to a Reuters analysis of partial data published by his team, a fraction of what the U.S. government pays contractors each year.

Musk's own SpaceX, for example, has about $22 billion in contracts with the U.S. government.

The first phase of Musk's rapid-fire effort appears driven more by an ideological assault on federal agencies long hated by conservatives than a good-faith effort to save taxpayer dollars, according to two veteran Republican budget experts. 


 

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