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R1 Elon Musk just dropped a bomb: he wouldn’t do DOGE again… and he’s not sure the “chainsaw government” mission even worked

Elon Musk says he’s no longer convinced his crusade to clean up government waste through the Department of Government Efficiency — better known as DOGE — was worth the chaos it unleashed.

Musk admitted he’s deeply unsure whether his high-profile stint running Washington’s most meme-able agency actually worked, in a wide-ranging — and, at times, philosophical — interview on “The Katie Miller Podcast.”

“We’re a little bit successful. We’re somewhat successful,” the Tesla founder said when Miller asked if DOGE achieved what he’d hoped.

Elon Musk wouldn't do DOGE again, doubts if effort to chainsaw government was successful, he said on Katie Miller's podcast

But he quickly undercut the praise, lamenting how entrenched the waste was.

“There was, like, probably $100, maybe $200 billion worth of zombie payments per year,” he said, noting DOGE shut down only a fraction of it.

The SpaceX CEO said cutting off even that much cash came with serious blowback.

“If you stop money going to political corruption, they will lash out big time,” he explained. “They really want the money to keep flowing.”

Musk mentioned the violent outbreak of vandalism on Tesla vehicles earlier this year after he began working with the second Trump administration.

When Miller asked point-blank whether he’d do DOGE again, Musk hesitated.

“I mean, no, I don’t think so,” he admitted. “I think instead of doing DOGE, I would have basically … worked on my companies, essentially.”

He added that in another timeline, without the political storm, “the cars — they wouldn’t have been burning the cars.”

Elon Musk appears on the Katie Miller podcast

The tech mogul was referring to a violent outbreak of vandalism on Tesla vehicles earlier this year after he began working with the second Trump administration.

Musk also said joining Washington never gave him any illusions.

He blasted what he called “massive transfer payments” to migrants and claimed the system creates a “gigantic money magnet” that encourages people to come to the US.

Elon Musk holds a chainsaw at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).

“I wouldn’t say I was super illusioned to begin with,” he shrugged, before launching into a blistering critique of government spending.

Despite the heavy political talk, the X owner frequently veered into the personal. He confessed that “AI nightmares” still jolt him awake — “many days in a row,” he said — and he’s running life on six hours of sleep.

When asked what actually keeps him up, Musk deadpanned: “Why do I wake up in nightmares? Oh, AI. Yeah.”

Elon Musk DOGE

He insisted he has no “irrational fears,” saying, “If I find an irrational fear, I … squelch it. Fear is the mind killer.”

But even the world’s richest man has limits — especially in public. Musk said he can’t do anything “where there’s the general public” because of instant selfie mobs and “serious security issues,” especially after the assassination of Charlie Kirk.

“Life is on a hardcore mode,” he said. “You make one mistake, and you’re dead.”

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk with his son X Æ A-Xii join US President Donald Trump as he signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, February 11, 2025.. Tech billionaire Elon Musk, who has been tapped by President Donald Trump to lead federal cost-cutting efforts, said the United States would go "bankrupt" without budget cuts. Musk leads the efforts under the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), and was speaking at the White House with Trump, who has in recent weeks unleashed a flurry of orders aimed at slashing federal spending. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP via Getty Images) / AFP PICTURES OF THE YEAR 2025

In the end, Musk’s uncertainty about DOGE hung over the conversation with Miller, the wife of Stephen Miller, one of President Trump’s top White House aides — but he hedged on whether he would return to the initiative if given a chance.

“I don’t think so,” he mused. “Knowing what I know now.”

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