Welcome to the Weekly Gov Efficiency Update: Is DC Pumping Tax Money? This week, the conversation in Washington is all about aggressive cuts, bold restructuring, and the heated push to make government deliver more for less. House Republican leaders are touting their wins, with House Majority Leader Steve Scalise celebrating what he calls “the largest tax cut in American history” and newly signed bills aimed at slashing waste and redirecting public money away from what he labels as “radical foreign aid initiatives.” The so-called Rescissions Act, just signed into law, claims $9 billion in savings, targeting everything from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to overseas programs that the administration asserts are out of line with American values.
The drive for government efficiency isn’t just about spending cuts. In a major restructuring, President Trump has created Schedule G, a new federal workforce category that allows high-level political appointees to take the reins on key policy roles. The administration argues that by boosting the number of non-career political posts, federal agencies can ramp up efficiency, accountability, and enact presidential priorities faster—especially in agencies like Veterans Affairs. Critics, however, see this as a bid for politicizing the civil service and making it easier to purge nonpartisan experts, echoing the controversies of the old Schedule F proposal, which never came to fruition during Trump’s first term.
Over at the FCC, deregulation has moved forward, with the commission removing decades-old cable rate rules and slashing thousands of words of red tape under an initiative known as “Delete, Delete, Delete.” Federal officials claim these moves will foster modernization and innovation, easing regulatory burdens on both industry and local governments, while opening new lanes for infrastructure improvements—from broadband rollout to advanced data centers essential for AI and national security objectives.
But not everyone is buying into the efficiency mantra. Recent survey data from the Partnership for Public Service found a slim majority of Americans—51 percent—oppose the president’s layoffs of federal workers and nearly as many reject agency funding cuts. Despite the push for leaner government, many in the public remain wary of deep cuts potentially undermining public services.
Thanks for tuning in to the Weekly Gov Efficiency Update. Don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta