Living in the Lib Bubble Makes Them Lose
MS Now Reporter Interviewed Drunk LA Voters. It Was Pure Cinema.
Bureaucrats in the Way
The Collapse Was Not an Accident
Difficult Freedom or Easy Tyranny: Which Will America Choose?
A Mouthful of Deception
Ali Velshi's 'Deep Unease' Over America at 250
Voters Must Know Every Democrat Sent to Washington Will Hurt Our Country
Driving People Out of California
Playing With Fire – Tehran's Deadly Gambit As Economic Collapse Looms
Europe Needs Patriotism
When Businesses Leave, They Likely Won’t Be Back
Biden's Privacy Panic: 50 Years on the Taxpayer Payroll, Now Suddenly Shy About...
SCOTUS Allows Alabama's New Congressional Map to Stay in Place
Can We Stop Giving Influencers Everything Just Because They're Famous?
Tipsheet
Premium

There's Been an Update in the DOGE and US Institute of Peace Saga

There's Been an Update in the DOGE and US Institute of Peace Saga
AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

Earlier this year, Townhall reported how staff members with the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) entered the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) after a standoff.

The DOGE staffers were escorted by armed police officers. USIP, a private entity, is funded and controlled by the federal government. This “takeover by force” instigated a lawsuit, which was amplified by the fact that DOGE gutted hundreds of staffers from the agency.

This week, there was an update with the lawsuit. 

According to several reports, a federal judge ruled against the Trump administration’s efforts to take over USIP.

In Judge Beryl Howell’s ruling on Monday in US District Court in Washington, D.C., she ordered the reinstatement of USIP’s acting president, George Moose, calling those who replaced him “illegitimately installed.”

That’s not all. Howell wrote that the administration’s “severe actions to dissemble USIP, including terminating its appointed Board members, its expert management, its dedicated staff and contractors located in both Washington, D.C. and around the world, and dispersing its assets and headquarters building … were unlawful.”

“Congress’s restrictions on the President’s removal power of USIP Board members are squarely constitutional,” she added, including that the Trump administration used force and “threats of criminal process” to enter DOGE.

“The President has no constitutional removal authority outside of the Executive branch. President Trump’s removal of the ten board members here was thus unlawful,” she added.

USIP reacted in a statement, saying that the agency “has worked to spread peace and stability around the world.”

“Today’s ruling allows USIP to continue that work,” the group said, adding that its “board, management, and staff look forward to restarting USIP’s programs.”

At the beginning of his term, Trump deemed USIP (and a slew of other agencies) as “unnecessary.” These agencies were among the first on the DOGE chopping block.

Previously, the USIP wiped a terabyte of data surrounding its finances when DOGE began its probe into the agency. Elon Musk, who spearheaded DOGE, confirmed this on X.

“They deleted a terabyte of financial data to cover their crimes, but they don’t understand technology, so we recovered it,” Musk wrote.

That’s not all. The official DOGE X account posted a list of USIP contracts that were cancelled. This included a $132,000 to Mohammad Qasem Halimi, an ex-Taliban member who was Afghanistan's former Chief of Protocol. Additionally, this included $2,232,500 to an outside accountant who tried to wipe the data. This data was recovered.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos