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Musk, Ramaswamy vow ‘mass head-count reductions’ in U.S. government
Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy vowed “mass headcount reductions” to the federal government in an opinion piece Wednesday that sketched out their vision for President-elect Donald Trump’s “Department of Government Efficiency” in the greatest detail so far.
Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Musk and Ramaswamy laid out their plans to slash federal regulations, cut government spending and significantly reduce the number of federal employees. Trump tapped the two with running the “DOGE” initiative last week, but basic questions about the effort — including its goals, operations and authorities — have primarily remained a source of speculation.
While their essay left much unclear, tech entrepreneur Musk and Ramaswamy — a billionaire executive and a former 2024 GOP presidential rival of Trump’s — began to articulate the legal and procedural steps by which they plan to transform federal operations.
The DOGE commission, they wrote, will first “work with legal experts embedded in government agencies” and “advanced technology” to identify regulations that Trump can repeal.
Musk and Ramaswamy argued that recent cases decided by the conservative majority on the Supreme Court will enable major reductions in federal regulations. After Trump “nullifies thousands of such regulations,” the DOGE will then work with “embedded appointees” across federal agencies to “identify the minimum number of employees” required for an agency to perform its minimum functions.
The DOGE leaders suggested that Trump can unilaterally slash the number of federal employees because many of them will no longer be necessary once the regulations are eliminated.
Musk and Ramaswamy did not specify the number of federal employees they envision being cut under their effort. They wrote that “existing laws” can give federal employees “incentives for early retirement” and voluntary severance payments to “facilitate a graceful exit.”
These proposals could affect not just scores of federal operations but also the Washington area, which is home to hundreds of thousands of federal workers.
To reduce federal spending, Musk and Ramaswamy also proposed eliminating programs that Congress funds but where specific spending authorization has lapsed.
In the op-ed, Musk and Ramaswamy said “large-scale audits” during “temporary suspension of payments” could yield savings, although they didn’t articulate what that would entail.
The op-ed embraces a dramatic change in the balance of power over spending. Trump’s aides have planned to challenge a 1974 budget law that limits the president’s ability to cease spending on federal programs without congressional approval. If the Supreme Court agrees, the White House would dramatically expand its ability to cut programs unilaterally.
They also suggested a reprisal of an effort that petered out at the end of Trump’s first term.
In the waning weeks of Trump’s first administration, the White House moved forward a controversial policy that would have allowed the president to fire tens of thousands of government employees.
Trump officials focused the effort on mid-and high-ranking professionals in policymaking roles whom they said were impossible to fire, protected by long-standing civil service rules. Each agency would identify career employees to shift into a new job category known as Schedule F.
Implementation of the new policy, mandated by an executive order the White House issued less than two weeks before Election Day in 2020, accelerated at the White House budget office. OMB officials sent a list of roles identified by Russell Vought's staff to the federal personnel agency for final sign-off. Vought was the head of the White House Office of Management and Budget. The list comprised 88 percent of the workforce, 425 analysts and other experts who would shift into Schedule F. President Joe Biden killed the executive order on his first day in office.
Trump vowed during his campaign to reinstate Schedule F it he took back the White House, and Vought seems positioned to overturn the rule and lead the charge once more. The Musk and Ramaswamy op-ed did not mention Schedule F by name, though the intent appears largely similar.
See more here: Musk, Ramaswamy vow ‘mass head-count reductions’ in U.S. government - The Washington Post
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U.S. Casts Sole Vote Against Gaza Cease-Fire Resolution
The United States on Wednesday vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for an immediate and unconditional cease-fire between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, where fighting has raged for more than 13 months and a humanitarian crisis is intensifying.
Underlining Washington’s diplomatic isolation on the issue, the United States cast the sole vote against the resolution, with the 14 other Council members voting in favor.
The United States said it vetoed the resolution, the fifth the Council has taken up, because it did not make the cease-fire contingent on the release of the hostages still being held in Gaza. The resolution does call for the release of all hostages, but the wording suggests that their release would come only after a cease-fire was implemented.
The impasse at the United Nations appeared in contrast to cease-fire talks in Lebanon, where a top U.S. envoy, Amos Hochstein, said on Wednesday that there had been “additional progress” in efforts to halt the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group allied with Hamas. Mr. Hochstein, saying he hoped “to try to bring this to a close if we can," traveled to Israel on Wednesday evening.
Hochstein was set to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel on Thursday.
The leader of Hezbollah said Wednesday that the war’s end was now in the hands of Israeli leaders.
The U.S. veto on Wednesday was the fourth time the United States has blocked an effort by the Council to demand a cease-fire in Gaza since last year, when Hamas led an attack on Israel that killed about 1,200 people and took more than 200 others hostage. More than 40,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the local health authorities, and the territory faces the risk of famine, experts say.
Although Security Council resolutions are considered international law, the Council lacks enforcement powers. It could impose punitive measures, such as sanctions, but that would also require member states to agree.
Washington, while working with Qatar and Egypt for months for a cease-fire deal and the release of hostages, has backed Israel’s position that one cannot come before the other.
After the vote, Israel’s ambassador, Danny Danon, thanked the United States and blamed Hamas for the suffering of Palestinian civilians.
READ MORE: U.S. Casts Sole Vote Against Gaza Cease-Fire Resolution - The New York Times
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New contractor working on Gulf Shores Hwy. 59 expansion
GULF SHORES — BY RUTH MAYO - Driving by the traffic cones that line Hwy. 59, one might start to wonder what the timeline for construction looks like for this project.
“They’re going to start paving that new lane from 19th down to Fort Morgan Road this next week,” said Clint Colvin, capital programs director for the City of Gulf Shores. “And at the start of December, we will shift the traffic.”
After the new lane has been paved, he said there will still be two lanes of traffic while a median is installed to Hwy 59. Colvin said the city is expecting the road on the south side of the W.C. Holmes Bridge to be “completely done” in May 2025.Colvin explained how the construction is an “interim thing” with three stages of progress. The south side of bridge to Fort Morgan Road is first phase, and the second phase is from the north side of the bridge to Target.
Colvin said the city expects the second phase to be completed around the end of summer next year.
The third phase is from Target to County Road 6 and will be completed “through the state” next year and should be finished by next summer.
“For now, that’s where were stopping. We talked about going from (County Road) 6 to 8, but we will need a grant for that,” Colvin said.
Colvin also explained how Wiregrass, the new contractor for the project, bought out the previous contractor and will remain consistent with the original plans for construction.
Mayor Robert Craft mentioned during a public presentation on the city's Vision 2035 strategic 10-year plan that the original construction company did not work out, which is what has caused delays to the project.
Read the rest of the story here: New contractor working on Gulf Shores Hwy. 59 expansion - Gulf Coast Media
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