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Elon Musk admits huge DOGE failure?

December 11, 2025 By: The Horn editorial team

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Mega billionaire Elon Musk, in an interview conservative influencer Katie Miller, said his efforts leading the Department of Government Efficiency were only “somewhat successful” — and that he would not do it over again.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO, who also owns the social media platform X, still defended President Donald Trump’s spending-slashing agency that Musk left in the spring. Yet Musk bemoaned how difficult it is to remake the federal government quickly, and he acknowledged how much his businesses suffered because of his DOGE work and its lack of popularity.

“We were a little bit successful. We were somewhat successful,” he told Miller.

When Miller pressed Musk on whether he would do it all over again, he said: “I don’t think so. … Instead of doing DOGE, I would have, basically, built … worked on my companies.”

Almost wistfully, Musk added, “They wouldn’t have been burning the cars” — a reference to violent protests against Tesla.

Still, things certainly have turned up for Musk since his departure from Trump’s administration. Tesla shareholders approved a pay package that could make Musk the world’s first trillionaire.

Musk was speaking as a guest on the “Katie Miller Podcast,” which Miller, who is married to top Trump adviser Stephen Miller, launched after leaving government employment to work for Musk in the private sector. The two sat in chairs facing each other for a conversation that lasted more than 50 minutes and spanned topics from DOGE to Musk’s thoughts on AI, social media, conspiracy theories, and fashion.

Musk credited the agency with saving as much as $200 billion annually in “zombie payments” that he said can be avoided with better automated systems and coding for federal payouts.

But that number is dwarfed by Musk’s ambitious promises at one time that an efficiency commission could measure savings in the trillions.

 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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