
'America has DOGE fever': States from NJ to TX draft similar initiatives as federal leaders celebrate
The spread of DOGE-centric legislation and bureaucracies has taken off like a SpaceX rocket in several states across the country since Elon Musk and lawmakers like Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, and Rep. Aaron Bean, R-Fla., began their work on that front this year.
Bean, chair of the bipartisan DOGE Caucus, was asked about copycat initiatives popping up around the country and remarked, "America has DOGE fever."
"As elected officials, we must ensure we are good stewards of taxpayer dollars. This means we must identify, investigate and eliminate wasteful spending."
With a governor's race in November and President Donald Trump only losing their state by a historically small margin, Garden State Republicans appeared bullish this week as they put forth a proposal to "bring DOGE to New Jersey."
GOP Assemblymen Alex Sauickie and Christopher DePhillips recently introduced Resolution 213 to create the NJ Delegation on Government Efficiency within the Treasury Department.
Sauickie quoted former President Ronald Reagan's 1985 retort that "government is like a baby – an alimentary canal with a big appetite at one end and no responsibility at the other."
"Except babies, if raised and disciplined rightly, grow into adults who usually become productive members of society. Those adopting our state budgets show no such discipline," Sauickie said, adding that it is time for "grownups to take responsibility and say 'no'" to reckless spending.
Some Trenton lawmakers have painted New Jersey's financial outlook as a "fiscal cliff," and DePhillips blamed outgoing Gov. Phil Murphy for claiming he inherited the problem from Republican Gov. Chris Christie.
"Taxpayers want accountability for how their hard-earned money is spent," DePhillips said.
He also called on Murphy to "stop fighting Trump" and lower New Jersey's business taxes before the third-founded state in the union "loses out" on the potential upswing of the new administration.
Republican state Sen. Joe Pennacchio added in a recent Fox News Digital interview that he would be forming a DOGE committee in the state legislature.
"We're mirroring what the federal government and what [Musk is] doing," said Pennacchio.
This week, Kentucky lawmakers also prioritized government efficiency measures, with Republican state Rep. Jared Bauman forwarding a bill to establish a working group to help the state treasury modernize its tax collections and accounting.
In Texas, lawmakers in both the state Senate and House are working on DOGE-centric initiatives.
Senate President Pro-Tempore Brandon Creighton, a Republican, first oversaw the passage of the strongest DEI ban in the U.S. during the 2023 session, which eliminated billions in taxpayer-funded waste and refocused public universities on education over social issues.
After DOGE formed at the federal level, Creighton said Texas is already a model for how a jurisdiction that prioritizes government efficiency will work.
"Seeing the swift action by President Trump and Elon Musk with DOGE is a welcome and necessary new era in Washington, D.C. – and I know they are just getting started," Creighton told Fox News Digital on Wednesday.
"Many have said that Washington should take notes from Texas – because the Texas economic engine is proof that when government is committed to efficiency, accountability and conservative results, taxpayers win."
Meanwhile, Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, officially the president of the Senate, announced a bill late last month called "Texas DOGE – Improving Government Efficiency," according to Bloomberg.
Another reported bill by Republican state Sen. Bryan Hughes would form a DOGE office in the executive branch.
Meanwhile, the Texas House is considering forming a DOGE committee to analyze government efficiency through a 13-member panel.
It would investigate fraud claims, inefficient use of tax dollars, and the use of AI, according to FOX-7.
In Missouri, Republican state Rep. Ben Baker told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that Missourians believe the state government is not as efficient or responsive as it should be.
"We want to look into that," said Baker.
Baker recently announced he was named to lead the state's new DOGE Standing Committee, adding his work will "align with federal efforts."
In New Hampshire, newly-inaugurated Gov. Kelly Ayotte's first executive order created a 15-member Commission on Government Efficiency (COGE).
"COGE will make us smarter than ever before when it comes to saving taxpayer dollars and finding better ways to serve the people of our state," she said in her inaugural address.
It will be led by former Gov. Craig Benson and businessman Andy Crews.
North Carolina also sought to get in on the DOGE trend.
Republican House Speaker Destin Hall unveiled the new NC Select Committee on Government Efficiency.
State Reps. Keith Kidwell and John Torbett, both Republicans, will lead the initiative, looking into waste, duplication, mismanagement and constitutional violations.
"As the new Trump administration rightfully takes aim at Washington D.C.'s wasteful spending and inefficient bureaucracy, it is time for us in Raleigh to do the same," Kidwell said in a statement.
Bean, the U.S. House's DOGE leader, further remarked on the collective efforts:
"It's exciting to see states pick up the DOGE baton, and I applaud their efforts to improve government efficiency and stop the abuse of taxpayer dollars."
Some in Congress, however, have cast doubt on DOGE. Rep. Seth Magaziner, D-R.I., said at an anti-DOGE rally that some of the actions at the federal level are "completely illegal."
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