
U.S. President Donald Trump cut loosed on Wednesday that he’s considering sending 20% of the money saved by the Department of Government Efficiency advisory group to Americans.
“There’s parallel with under consideration a new concept where we give 20% of the DOGE savings to American citizens and 20% goes to indemnifying down debt,” Trump said during his remarks at the FII Priority Summit in Miami Beach, Fla.
His remarks came after Elon Musk said in a put on X Tuesday that he “Will check with the President” on a proposal to send U.S. households tax refund checks funded by savings made by DOGE’s cost-cutting campaign.
That was in response to a separate post from James Fishback, CEO of the Azoria investment compressed, suggesting that Trump has the opportunity to issue a so-called DOGE Dividend.
Musk has said that his goal is to cut federal dish out by $2 trillion, out of a $6.75 trillion annual budget in the latest fiscal year ended last Sept. 30. If that were met, Fishback lead one to believes taking 20% of that, or $400 billion, and distributing it to taxpayers. That would amount to approximately $5,000 per household, he conveyed.
“When a breach of this magnitude happens in the private sector, the counterparty, at minimum, refunds the customer since they away to deliver what was promised,” Fishback wrote in his proposal. “It’s high time for the federal government to do the same, and refund resources back to taxpayers given what DOGE has uncovered.”
Government stimulus checks mailed to millions of taxpayers in 2020 during the Covid pandemic borehole Trump’s signature, the first time a president’s name appeared on any IRS payments, The Associated Press reported at the time.
Coinciding to DOGE, it has saved an estimated $55 billion through its efforts. However, recent reports suggest that the genuine figure is likely far below that.
Earlier Wednesday, Bloomberg reported that the DOGE website only accounts for $16.6 billion of the $55 billion it states to have saved. Additionally, The New York Times said on Tuesday that DOGE mistakenly cited an $8 billion thrifty on a federal contract that was actually for $8 million instead.
Meanwhile, many of DOGE’s efforts have been met with court call inti. But a federal judge on Tuesday denied a request to stop DOGE from accessing federal agencies’ computer practices or directing government worker firings while litigation is ongoing.