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Executive Order Gives Musk Team Hiring Authority Across Federal Government

President Donald Trump’s latest executive order grants sweeping hiring powers across the federal government to his billionaire adviser Elon Musk’s task force, Department of Government Efficiency, raising fears that the ongoing workforce purge could erode critical federal cybersecurity efforts and weaken government cyber defenses.
See Also: Cisco Umbrella for Government: Helping Agencies Meet Their Enhanced Cybersecurity Mandates and TIC3.0 Standards
Trump signed an executive order, “Implementing the President’s Department of Government Efficiency Workforce Optimization Initiative,” late Tuesday, The order mandates that federal agencies hire no more than one employee for every four who resign or are fired. The order also directs agency heads to prepare for “large-scale reductions in force” while giving DOGE team leads control over key hiring decisions, including which vacancies should be refilled and how data-driven hiring plans are developed.
The order includes no carve-outs for agencies such as the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency or protections for career cybersecurity officials throughout federal government. The White House has already signaled its stance on cybersecurity staffing, reversing an initial exemption for CISA in a recent voluntary resignation program – despite the agency’s responsibilities for defending elections, federal networks and the nation’s critical infrastructure from cyberthreats (see: Federal Cyber Workers Can Now Accept Trump Resignation Offer).
Top Democrats criticized the latest executive order, including Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., who called the administration’s efforts illegal and “a dark day for the United States government.”
“The mass indiscriminate firing of hundreds of thousands of dedicated, nonpartisan civil servants by a wannabe dictator and his unelected pet billionaire will have an immediate and devastating impact on the integrity and capability of our federal workforce,” Connolly, ranking member of the committee on oversight and government reform, said in a statement. “America won’t look like America if this wrecking ball wields it reckless destruction.”
The administration has meanwhile targeted key cybersecurity leaders, ousting senior FBI officials including Robert Nordwall, who led the bureau’s criminal and cyber response efforts, and placing at least 17 CISA employees on leave pending review.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt defended Trump and Musk’s federal workforce purge, telling reporters the president had promised on the campaign trail that “Elon was going to head up the Department of Government Efficiency” and that together “with a great team around them,” they would “look at the receipts of this federal government and ensure it’s accountable to American taxpayers” (see: White House Defends Musk Amid Sensitive Data Access Uproar).
Trump’s latest executive order includes exemptions for all military personnel and says agency heads can make their own exemptions for “any position they deem necessary to meet national security, homeland security or public safety responsibilities.” The White House has yet to appoint agency leaders across key departments, including CISA.
The White House and CISA did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Musk defended DOGE’s controversial efforts to axe entire agencies like USAID during a Tuesday press conference in the Oval Office, saying “it’s essential for America to remain solvent as a country, and it’s essential for America to have the resources necessary to provide things to its citizens.”