Supreme Court temporarily halts access sought by watchdog group to DOGE records

The Supreme Court on Friday temporarily paused judicial orders requiring the Department of Government Efficiency to turn over records and answer questions in the coming days and weeks concerning its operations.

The Supreme Court on Friday temporarily paused judicial orders requiring the Department of Government Efficiency to turn over records and answer questions in the coming days and weeks concerning its operations. (Will Dunham, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The Supreme Court temporarily halted orders requiring the Department of Government Efficiency to release records.
  • DOGE, led by Elon Musk, is questioned over its agency status under the federal Freedom of Information Act.
  • Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington seeks DOGE records, arguing it operates independently; Trump administration disagrees.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday temporarily paused judicial orders requiring the Department of Government Efficiency, established by President Donald Trump and spearheaded by his billionaire adviser Elon Musk, to turn over records and answer questions in the coming days and weeks concerning its operations.

The court put on hold Washington-based District Judge Christopher Cooper's orders for DOGE to respond to a government watchdog group's requests for information after finding that DOGE likely is a government agency covered by the federal Freedom of Information Act.

The Supreme Court's action, called an administrative stay, gives it additional time to consider the Justice Department's formal request to block Cooper's order while litigation proceeds in a lower court.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington sued, seeking an array of records from DOGE through the FOIA statute, a law that allows the public to seek access to records produced by government agencies.

The group sought information on DOGE's activities over its role in the mass firings and cuts to federal programs pursued after the Republican president returned to office in January.

The Trump administration contends that DOGE is an advisory entity and not subject to FOIA. In response, the watchdog group sought information to determine whether DOGE is subject to FOIA because it wields the kind of authority of an agency independent of the president.

Cooper ruled in April that DOGE had to turn over some records sought by the group and was entitled to question DOGE's Acting Administrator Amy Gleason at a deposition. A federal appeals court declined on May 14 to put Cooper's order on hold.

The administration urged the Supreme Court to act, saying that the judge's orders intrude on the powers of the executive branch and compromise the ability of a wide array of advisers to provide candid, confidential advice to the president.

In one of his decisions, Cooper said DOGE's operations have been marked by "unusual secrecy." In another, the judge said the language of Trump's executive orders concerning DOGE suggests that it is "exercising substantial independent authority."

Contributing: John Kruzel

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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