A top Democrat in the Virginia House of Representatives has sounded the alarm over President-elect Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) plan to tell some federal employees, “You’re fired,” on the grounds of efficiency.
The state’s top Senate Republican countered Thursday that the majority party is “asking the wrong questions.”
Earlier this week, House Speaker Don Scott Jr. sent a letter to the federal unemployment agency warning of the impact of such a plan and the potential for an increase in unemployment claims.
“I want to raise my family in Virginia, pay my taxes in Virginia, and call Virginia my home,” Scott wrote in a letter to Virginia Employment Commissioner Demetrios Melis, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported. “We should all be concerned about what these changes will mean for the workers we call.”
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“If we take President-elect Trump at his word that he will immediately move to cut jobs and move government agencies, it is safe to say that a significant portion of our federal workforce will be adversely affected,” said Scott, a Portsmouth Democrat. he added. .
Scott reportedly said he believed northern Virginia and the Hampton Roads region, which he represents, would be the hardest hit.
“I am concerned that in the coming months, not only will our proposed government changes result in a significant increase in unemployment, but that the changes will also have a negative impact on Virginia and the commonwealth’s unemployment rate. And throughout our economy,” he told the Times-Dispatch.
However, Senate Minority Leader Ryan McDougle (R-New Kent) said the DOGE concept addresses significant concerns of Virginia and U.S. taxpayers regarding fiscally responsible governance.
“That’s the wrong question,” McDougle said in an interview Thursday.
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“The question is: Are we receiving the money that Virginians earn and pay to the federal government, and is that money being spent wisely?
“If the federal government is paying people to do work they’re not supposed to do, that’s a waste of taxpayer money.”
President Trump’s DOGE co-leader, Vivek Ramaswamy, previously told Fox Business, “We’re expecting massive cuts… (and) certain government agencies will be completely eliminated.”
Ramaswamy’s counterpart Elon Musk has expressed similar sentiments, tweeting, “Delete the CFPB,” referring to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
In addition, Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, who is considered the top DOGE member in the Senate, has proposed a bill that would move about one-third of federal employees out of the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia. is at the forefront of The bill Ernst proposed has a long acronym: “DRAIN THE SWAMP Act.”
Ernst also asked Biden agency leaders for answers about the work-from-home policies their employees are enjoying.
In his remarks Thursday, McDougle said that if Democrats were so concerned about the issue, they could use Virginia taxpayer money to “subsidize” ridership shortfalls due to telework policies criticized by Ernst. He added that he should have thought twice about plans to funnel more of the money into the Washington area subway system.
“My Democratic friends aren’t really concerned about millions of dollars being given to Metro when (federal workers) don’t have to come into work and they have to subsidize it,” McDougle said. I felt it,” he said.
Virginia’s fiscal year 2024 budget included approximately $144 million in Metro funding. Metro CEO Randy Clark said in June that the transit agency expects to make an additional $50 million in efficiencies on its nearly $5 billion budget, according to multiple reports.
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Earlier this month, the top Democrat on the state House Labor Committee said he was “extremely disappointed” in the response from Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s representatives who expressed concerns about potential federal workforce cuts.
Dumfries state representative Candy Mandon King in November touted the Virginia Republican Party’s “streamlining of government bureaucracy,” noting that thousands of federal employees live in the state and in her district. In response, he called DOGE’s plan “disastrous.” “It’s good for all Americans, including Virginians.”
Mandon King’s district is located in suburban Prince William County, Washington, which has long been led by prominent conservative Corey Stewart but has tilted heavily toward the Democratic Party in recent years.
“No wonder Northern Virginians have lost faith in the Virginia Republican Party,” Mandon King said.
Yonkin, who was a successful business executive before entering politics, has previously said that anyone who leaves the private sector to work in government quickly realizes that a fundamental adjustment is needed.
“Whether I run the Virginia government or President Trump returns to the federal government,[we]know that it’s going to be inefficient. It’s not going to work at the level of efficiency that you would expect from a business.” I don’t,” he told the Daily Progress. of Charlottesville.
Government efficiency plans “could lead to some job losses in the federal government. … The great thing about Virginia is that we have nearly 300,000 unfilled jobs,” he added.
According to the Roanoke Times, Mellis similarly said Scott Virginia is “well prepared” to adapt to changing employment statistics, echoing concerns expressed by Mandon King earlier this month. Some reassured it was too early.
Earlier this month, Youngkin urged incoming Trump administration officials to choose Virginia as their home over Maryland or the District of Columbia, citing lower taxes and better-ranked schools.
Christian Martinez, a spokesman for Youngkin, said in a statement to Fox News Digital that when the Republican took office after eight years as Democratic governor, Virginia’s economy was “stagnant” and the unemployment system “in disarray.” He said he was in a “state”.
“Common sense policies that lower the cost of living and bring real business-like efficiency to government are helping to solve both,” Martinez said.
“The Governor appreciates Speaker Scott’s recent efforts to support further tax cuts. That means Virginia is well-positioned as the president works on this.”