Is DOGE Lying?
I asked Grok what its figure for the amount of savings that DOGE has made based on media and government releases:
To estimate the amount of savings the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has achieved as of April 13, 2025, based on media and government releases, we need to critically evaluate the available data, considering both official DOGE statements and independent analyses that highlight discrepancies and errors in reported figures.
Official DOGE Statements and Government Releases
Elon Musk announced on April 10, 2025, during a Cabinet meeting, that DOGE is targeting $150 billion in federal savings for fiscal year 2026 (October 2025 to September 2026) through reductions in waste, fraud, and abuse. This figure represents a significant downward revision from earlier projections of $2 trillion and $1 trillion, reflecting a more realistic assessment of what DOGE can achieve given bureaucratic and legislative constraints. [Ref trend ID: 0] [Ref web ID: 2]
DOGE’s official website provides more granular data on savings. As of February 17, 2025, DOGE claimed $55 billion in savings from terminated contracts, according to NPR’s analysis. However, only $8.5 billion of this amount was backed by detailed receipts, and NPR verified just $2.3 billion as actual savings after accounting for contracts that were already obligated, not terminated, or yielded no budgetary impact. By March 24, 2025, DOGE reported $130 billion in savings, but independent analysis cited in Wikipedia found that tens of billions were misaccounted, with over a third of canceled contracts (out of 1,127 listed) either already obligated or not resulting in savings. [Ref web ID: 0] [Ref web ID: 4]
The DOGE website also highlights specific savings, such as $360 million by streamlining the Affordable Care Act Navigator program at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and $150 million from 58 contract cancellations in categories like Media, DEI, and Consulting (e.g., $405,000 at DHS for “resilience, energy, and sustainability management” and $4 million at DoT for DEIA programs). Additionally, smaller savings include $458,919 from canceling EPA subscriptions to Politico and Politico E&E, and $45 million from terminating three EPA DEI contracts. These specific figures total approximately $560 million in verified savings from these initiatives. [Ref web ID: 3]
Media Analyses and Independent Reviews
Media reports consistently point to significant overstatements in DOGE’s savings figures. Reuters reported on March 5, 2025, that DOGE’s initial $16 billion in claimed savings from canceled contracts dropped to $8.9 billion after corrections, with 941 out of 2,300 contracts saving no money at all. Notable errors included an $8 billion contract that was actually worth $8 million and a $655 million contract triple-counted as $1.8 billion in savings. [Ref web ID: 6]
The New York Times on April 10, 2025, noted that even the $150 billion target for FY 2026 likely overstates progress, as DOGE’s numbers are inflated by billions due to errors and guesswork. For instance, some savings were attributed to programs ended under previous administrations, and others involved contracts that wouldn’t have resulted in spending in the next fiscal year. [Ref trend ID: 4]
NPR’s February 20, 2025, analysis provides the most rigorous estimate, verifying only $2.3 billion in actual savings from DOGE’s early claims, with roughly half ($1.15 billion) coming from cuts to the Department of Education, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and the U.S. Agency for International Development. This figure is a small fraction of the federal budget, underscoring the gap between DOGE’s claims and actual budgetary impact. [Ref web ID: 4]
Synthesizing the Data for an Estimated Savings Figure
Given the discrepancies, we can construct a more grounded estimate by focusing on verified savings and adjusting for known errors:
- Verified Savings from Specific Initiatives: The DOGE website lists specific savings totaling $560 million (e.g., $360 million from CMS, $150 million from 58 contracts, $458,919 from EPA subscriptions, and $45 million from EPA DEI contracts). These are relatively well-documented and can be considered reliable. [Ref web ID: 3]
- NPR’s Verified Savings: NPR’s analysis of $2.3 billion in actual savings from early contract terminations (as of February 2025) provides a benchmark for broader cuts, particularly from agencies like the Department of Education and CFPB. This figure accounts for errors like obligated contracts and non-impactful cancellations. [Ref web ID: 4]
- Adjusting for Later Claims: DOGE’s claim of $130 billion in savings by March 24, 2025, is heavily caveated by independent findings that over a third of these savings (approximately $43 billion) are invalid due to already obligated or non-impactful contracts. If we apply a conservative correction, assuming a similar error rate to NPR’s findings (where only 4% of the $55 billion claimed was verified), the $130 billion claim might yield roughly $5.2 billion in actual savings ($130 billion × 0.04). However, since NPR’s $2.3 billion is already included in this timeline, we can estimate additional savings from February to March by scaling proportionally. If $55 billion claimed in February yielded $2.3 billion verified, the increase to $130 billion by March suggests an additional $3.1 billion in verified savings (($130 billion – $55 billion) × 0.04). [Ref web ID: 0] [Ref web ID: 4]
- Post-March Savings: From March 24 to April 13, 2025, DOGE’s target of $150 billion for FY 2026 suggests ongoing efforts, but no specific new savings are detailed beyond the $130 billion. Assuming a linear progression of savings and applying the same error correction rate, the additional $20 billion claimed ($150 billion – $130 billion) might yield another $800 million in verified savings ($20 billion × 0.04).
Total Estimated Savings
Combining these figures:
- Specific verified savings: $560 million
- NPR-verified savings (up to February 2025): $2.3 billion
- Additional verified savings (February to March 2025): $3.1 billion
- Additional verified savings (March to April 2025): $800 million
Total estimated savings = $560 million + $2.3 billion + $3.1 billion + $800 million = $6.76 billion.
Conclusion
Based on media and government releases, a conservative estimate of DOGE’s actual savings as of April 13, 2025, is approximately $6.76 billion. This figure accounts for verified savings from specific initiatives and adjusts broader claims for known errors, as identified by NPR, Reuters, and The New York Times. It is significantly lower than DOGE’s $150 billion target for FY 2026 and far below external claims like the $312 billion reported by usdebtclock.org, reflecting the challenges of accurately tracking federal savings amidst systemic inefficiencies and reporting errors. [Ref web ID: 0] [Ref web ID: 3] [Ref web ID: 4] [Ref web ID: 6] [Ref trend ID: 0] [Ref trend ID: 4]
Source: https://ncrenegade.com/is-doge-lying/
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All of the fraud accusations yet not a single arrest should give you a clue.