Trump’s Plan to Drain Swamp Already Working: Federal Employees Move to Quit

President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming administration is already shaking up Washington, D.C., and at present Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are leading the charge.

Tasked with spearheading the newly formed Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), Musk and Ramaswamy have ambitious plans to cut through the bloated bureaucracy that has plagued America for decades.

This from thepatriotjournal.com.

Their mission? Save taxpayers money, streamline government agencies, and protect constitutional liberties. In other words, they are coming for the swamp.

Their first target? Remote federal jobs.

Musk and Ramaswamy have argued that allowing government employees to work from home is a relic of the pandemic era for which taxpayers should not have to foot the bill anymore.

They are unapologetic about the backlash, even saying:

[T]hey’d welcome a wave of voluntary resignations.

For entrenched bureaucrats who have grown comfortable with inefficiency, this spells disaster. But for We the People, it could be the start of a much-needed government overhaul.

From The Post Millennial:

The incoming Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) under President-elect Donald Trump, which is led by entrepreneurs Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, is proposing to target remote government jobs.

As a result, federal employees are experiencing anxiety about the real possibility of losing their jobs, according to interviews given to CNN.

Some of these workers said DOGE might just be a signal for them to quit, claiming that losing the ability to work remotely would ‘upend their lives.’

The DOGE’s proposal to eliminate remote work has federal employees on edge. In interviews with CNN, many government workers admitted they might quit if required to return to the office five days a week.

One employee said:

The stress would be through the roof.

And commuting would force them to resign after 10 years with the General Services Administration.

Another worker lamented that returning to D.C. would mean splitting up their family.

Musk and Ramaswamy, however, are standing firm. In a fiery op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, they stated:

[R]emote work in government is a privilege, not a right.

Their stance is simple:

If you don’t want to show up, taxpayers shouldn’t pay you to stay home.

Their critics, including union leaders, have accused them of ignoring data and pushing policies without proper negotiation. But DOGE is not just about remote work—it is about dismantling inefficiency at every level of the federal government.

The DOGE [will be] taking a wrecking ball to wasteful spending and bloated agencies.

Musk’s no-nonsense tech-driven approach is paired with Ramaswamy’s legal acumen to identify inefficiencies across the board.

Together, they’re crafting a roadmap to slash regulations, restructure federal agencies, and make government more accountable to taxpayers.

Their efforts have sparked outrage from government unions, particularly the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE).

The AFGE insists that changes to working conditions must be negotiated, but Musk and Ramaswamy appear ready to bypass traditional red tape.

Ramaswamy is reportedly developing the legal justification for sweeping reforms, signaling that DOGE’s proposals will  not be business as usual.

The stakes are high. More than 1.3 million federal employees currently work remotely and forcing them back into offices could trigger massive turnover.

But that is what Musk and Ramaswamy want: A leaner, more efficient workforce focused on results rather than convenience.

For years, corrupt and inefficient government agencies have wasted taxpayer money while doing little to protect American liberties.

The creation of DOGE represents a bold step toward draining the swamp.