Musk says 'criminal organization' USAID is beyond repair and $50 billion agency will be shut down
Musk says 'criminal organization' USAID is beyond repair and $50 billion agency will be shut down
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‘You’ve got to basically get rid of the whole thing. It’s beyond repair. We’re shutting it down’ the tech billionaire said. Elon Musk has threatened to close the U.S. Agency for International Development, USAID, after claiming the federal agency is “criminal” and “beyond repair”. The billionaire tech mogul spoke out against the international development agency during a live session on X Spaces, early Monday, discussing conversations he’d had with President Donald Trump about enforcing a total shutdown of USAID.
“He [Trump] agreed we should shut it down,” Musk said during the live discussion. “It became apparent that it’s not an apple with a worm it in. What we have is just a ball of worms. You’ve got to basically get rid of the whole thing. It’s beyond repair. We’re shutting it down.”. On X, he doubled down on the attack, branding USAID a “criminal organization”, without anything to back up the wild claim, adding “Time for it to die”.
Just days after taking office, Trump issued an executive order to halt foreign aid for 90 days – a decision that came to be reflected in the State Department’s divisive action to freeze almost all funding for foreign assistance programs. USAID is an organization that provides foreign aid and humanitarian assistance to countries grappling with poverty, conflict, disease, and natural disasters. Initially established in 1961 under President John F. Kennedy, it has released billions of dollars since its inception across the world to support and propel struggling nations out of economic and political instability.
It operates as the world's largest single donor of international food assistance, according to its website – which has been down since the weekend and continues to be inaccessible as of Monday. Annually, the U.S. spends roughly $40 billion on foreign aid from a $50 billion budget – a sum that accounts for every four out of 10 dollars in global humanitarian aid, according to the Department of State.
The DOGE staff lacked sufficient security clearance to obtain and access the desired information, so the two USAID security officials — John Vorhees and Deputy Brian McGill — were legally obligated to deny access. Despite facing resistance, the DOGE teams did eventually obtain access to the classified information, which includes intelligence reports, according to the former official. Trump previously said that Musk and venture capitalist Vivek Ramaswamy would “pave the way for my Administration to dismantle Government Bureaucracy, slash excess regulations, cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure Federal Agencies” – effectively gutting federal departments as and when they choose.