
Musk's Doge gains access to federal payroll system despite staff warnings
According to two people familiar with the situation who spoke with the New York Times, Doge employees had spent around two weeks trying to obtain administrative access to the program, known as the Federal Personnel and Payroll System.
Then, toward the end of last week, senior career officials at the interior department reportedly issued a memo highlighting the unusual nature of the request and the associated risks with granting it.
The memo, reviewed by the Times, stated that 'such elevated access to critical high-value asset systems is rare with respect to individual systems and no single [Department of Interior] official presently has access to all HR, payroll and credentialing systems.'
The senior employees reportedly warned that granting Doge employees this level of access would allow them to be able to view highly sensitive personal information that is subject to controls under the Privacy Act and cautioned that individuals given this elevated access could become targets for cybersecurity attacks by terrorists, nations or other malicious actors.
The memo emphasized that gaining administrative access to the system 'typically requires training and certification'.
'Without formal qualifications, the Department may experience significant failure because of operator error,' the memo said.
On Friday, the federal employees reportedly asked the Doge workers to deliver the memo to Doug Burgum, the interior secretary, for his signature, thereby assuming the legal responsibility for the associated risks.
However, Burgum reportedly never signed the memo.
But on Saturday, interior department officials reportedly granted at least two Doge employees the access they had requested, the two people told the Times.
With this access, the Doge employees now have visibility into sensitive employee information, like social security numbers, and are able to more easily hire and fire federal workers, according to the Times, citing the two people with knowledge who spoke with the newspaper on condition of anonymity due to fear of retribution.
Meanwhile, Tyler Hassan, the recently named interior department's acting assistant secretary of policy, management and budget and a former Doge employee, reportedly placed two of the IT officials who had resisted the Doge employees on administrative leave and under investigation for their 'workplace behavior', according to the two sources.
In a statement, a spokesperson for the interior department said: 'We are working to execute the President's directive to cut costs and make the government more efficient for the American people and have taken actions to implement President Trump's Executive Orders.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
24 minutes ago
- The Independent
Air Canada staff refuse government back-to-work order with plans to restart flights now at risk
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
Keir Starmer to join European leaders for Trump-Zelensky meeting in Washington
The Prime Minister and a host of European leaders will travel to Washington DC in a show of solidarity with the Ukrainian leader. Sir Keir Starmer will join Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders for a meeting with US President Donald Trump at the White House on Monday, Downing Street has said. The Prime Minister and a host of European leaders will travel to Washington DC in a show of solidarity with the Ukrainian leader, whose last visit to the Oval Office ended in a tumultuous spat with Mr Trump. The US president is said to be mulling over Russia's demands to bring an end to the war, which include a land grab of two occupied Ukrainian regions: Donetsk and Luhansk. Several media outlets have reported Mr Trump is planning to urge his Ukrainian counterpart to agree to the conditions as part of a peace deal to end the war. The meeting follows the US president's summit with Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday, where little in the way of progress appeared to be made. However in the summit's aftermath, Mr Trump appeared to adopt a change of tone in his language about brokering a peace deal, moving away from insisting that a ceasefire is needed before a long-term agreement to end the war is made. This appeared to echo Mr Putin 's refusal to lay down arms ahead of a sustained peace. Other leaders making the journey to Washington with Sir Keir include France's Emmanuel Macron, Germany's Friedrich Merz, Finland's Alexander Stubb, EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and Nato chief Mark Rutte. The leaders are likely travelling to the White House with the aim of avoiding a repeat performance of February's public bust-up between Mr Zelensky and the American president, after which Mr Trump temporarily suspended aid to Ukraine. Downing Street insisted Sir Keir and other allies stand ready to support the next phase of talks to end the war. "At the meeting that will take place at the White House tomorrow, the Prime Minister, with other European partners, stands ready to support this next phase of further talks and will reaffirm that his backing for Ukraine will continue as long as it takes," a statement from No 10 said. Speaking in Brussels, Ms von der Leyen said Ukraine cannot be carved up without it having a seat at the table in negotiations. Standing alongside Mr Zelensky at a press conference ahead of the so-called coalition of the willing meeting, the EU chief said: "With regards to any territorial questions in Ukraine, our position is clear: international borders cannot be changed by force. These are decisions to be made by Ukraine and Ukraine alone, and these decisions cannot be taken without Ukraine at the table." On Saturday Sir Keir commended Mr Trump for bringing the conflict "closer than ever" to an end. The Prime Minister, along with France and Germany's leaders, will host a call of the coalition of the willing on Sunday afternoon. The coalition force aims to police a future peace deal by putting troops on the ground in Ukraine to deter Russian aggression. European leaders on Saturday suggested Mr Trump had indicated he is now willing to provide American air support for the alliance, a "security guarantee" said to be vital to its operation. Steve Witkoff, Mr Trump's special envoy, said Mr Putin had agreed to Nato-like protection for Ukraine for the first time at the Alaska summit. "We were able to win the following concession: That the United States could offer Article 5-like protection, which is one of the real reasons why Ukraine wants to be in Nato," he told CNN. Writing on social media on Sunday morning, the Ukrainian leader railed against Russia's refusal to lay down arms temporarily before agreeing to end the war. Mr Zelensky said: "We see that Russia rebuffs numerous calls for a ceasefire and has not yet determined when it will stop the killing. "This complicates the situation." He added: "If they lack the will to carry out a simple order to stop the strikes, it may take a lot of effort to get Russia to have the will to implement far greater - peaceful coexistence with its neighbours for decades. "But together we are working for peace and security. Stopping the killing is a key element of stopping the war." Mr Zelensky was expected to attend Sunday afternoon's video call with leaders from the coalition of the willing, which was scheduled to begin at 2pm UK time.


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Inside UK's first TGI Friday's - now abandoned and graffiti-covered
As TGI Friday's looks to make a comeback in the UK, pictures from inside the derelict and destroyed first restaurant in Edgbaston, Birmingham, show a grim state A derelict TGI Fridays has been left in ruins, with graffiti daubed across its boarded-up front and shards of broken glass scattered across the floor. The once-bustling Edgbaston restaurant, on Hagley Road, Birmingham, made history as the very first TGI Fridays in the UK before shutting its doors last October. But now, the famous site has been reduced to a vandal's playground. Spray paint covers much of the exterior, while one window appears to have been smashed, leaving glass littering the ground. The place is now surrounded by boards to keep intruders out. It comes after a Brit abroad slams all-inclusive hotel food asking 'what on earth is this?' It's not the first time an abandoned TGI has been targeted this year. In March, the Sutton Coldfield branch, which also lay empty, was broken into, with vandals leaving a gaping hole in one of its windows. The closures come after the US diner chain axed 35 of its restaurants in a shock move last year. But 51 sites were saved in a dramatic rescue deal by Breal Capital and Calveton UK, including the popular Birmingham NEC and Walsall Waterfront locations. Since lighting up British high streets back in 1986 with its neon-gilded entrance in Birmingham, TGI Fridays has been a beloved hangout, but the past year has seen its fortunes nosedive. In September 2024, Hostmore, which is the UK operator of the chain, pulled the plug on a fabled £177million buyout of the American parent and entered administration, triggering a wave of panic. Suddenly, 87 UK restaurants hung in limbo, and 4,500 jobs trembled on the brink. A rescue deal in October by private equity titans Breal Capital and Calveton UK swooped in to save the day. They bought 51 restaurants, preserving around 2,000 jobs, but left 35 sites to shut their doors with immediate effect, etching more than 1,000 redundancies into the record. The shuttered list reads like a UK road trip: Birmingham's historic Hagley Road, Leicester Square's flagship, Brighton Marina, Sutton Coldfield, Swansea, all which are boarded up amid growing despair. In January 2025, the cherished Leicester Square branch, once deemed safe, quietly closed too—a poignant sign of how perilous the chain's path remains. Now, behind the scenes, the brand is trying to stage a comeback. With an Americana-infused 'brand reset' in the works, which involves revamping 70% of its menu and leaning into its old-school charm,TGI Fridays hopes to re-ignite the spark that once made it a Friday-night staple. Birmingham City Council has been asked for comment.