Let justice be done, at last.
My January 14, 2025 letter to Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody, reportedly to be our next U.S. Senator from Florida, and to Assistant Attorney General Patricia Riste Gleason:
Followup letter:
In secret, behind locked gates, our Nation's Oldest City dumped a landfill in a lake (Old City Reservoir), while emitting sewage in our rivers and salt marsh. Organized citizens exposed and defeated pollution, racism and cronyism. We elected a new Mayor. We're transforming our City -- advanced citizenship. Ask questions. Make disclosures. Demand answers. Be involved. Expect democracy. Report and expose corruption. Smile! Help enact a St. Augustine National Park and Seashore. We shall overcome!
My January 14, 2025 letter to Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody, reportedly to be our next U.S. Senator from Florida, and to Assistant Attorney General Patricia Riste Gleason:
Followup letter:
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Feel the love? “'We have no room in our administration for Democrats,' a transition spokeswoman replied after good-government activists tried to join the president-elect’s new efficiency department."
President-elect Donald J. Trump’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency has been on a hiring spree, looking for tech executives and conservative activists to dig into the federal government and look for rules and spending to cut.
On Thursday, two activists from a left-leaning watchdog group asked: Where do we sign up?
“We write to request our appointment as members of the ‘Department of Government Efficiency,’” wrote Norman Eisen and Virginia Canter, in a letter to Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, the leaders of Mr. Trump’s unofficial effort that plans to slash regulations and spending.
The Trump transition team’s response: no.
“President Trump’s Truth made clear we have no room in our administration for Democrats,” said Katie Miller, a spokeswoman for the Trump transition, in an email to The New York Times.
She appeared to be referring to a post that the president-elect made on his social media network Truth Social, listing people whose allies his administration would not hire. The post did not mention Democrats by name — many of those listed were Republicans or former Trump appointees who had criticized Mr. Trump in the past — but it ended with a catchall prohibition against “people suffering from Trump Derangement Syndrome.”
Mr. Eisen is a former White House ethics official under President Barack Obama. Ms. Canter worked as an attorney for both Mr. Obama and President Bill Clinton. They recently founded a nonprofit, State Democracy Defenders Fund, which aims to track the actions of the cost-cutting effort, nicknamed DOGE, after an internet meme. Earlier, their nonprofit sent public-records requests to federal agencies, seeking details about the inquiries they had received from Mr. Musk’s and Mr. Ramaswamy’s team so far.
If appointed to the efficiency project, Mr. Eisen and Ms. Canter said they would be able to be in-house watchdogs, guarding its work against conflicts of interest. Both Mr. Musk, the world’s richest man, and Mr. Ramaswamy, a billionaire, own businesses that could benefit financially from shifts in federal policy.
While Mr. Trump has said the effort would lead to drastic savings and reforms, the efficiency department’s role is just to provide recommendations. Only Congress can make any cuts.
The two activists also said they could help insulate the efficiency department from allegations that it was violating the Federal Advisory Committee Act — a 1972 law that requires committees of nongovernment employees be “fairly balanced in terms of the points of view represented.”
Two leaders of another watchdog group, Public Citizen, made a similar request to join the cost-cutting effort earlier this week.
It has not been accepted so far, the co-president of Public Citizen, Lisa Gilbert, said Thursday.
David A. Fahrenthold is an investigative reporter writing about nonprofit organizations. He has been a reporter for two decades. More about David A. Fahrenthold