Trump’s White House chief rips Elon Musk for USAID cuts ‘no rational person’ could support
- by Independent
- Dec 16, 2025
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Elon Muskâs destruction of USAID ran counter to the Trump administrationâs broader goals and ignited a firestorm that the White House couldnât control, Donald Trumpâs chief of staff revealed in a bombshell new interview.
The explosive Vanity Fair interview with White House chief of staff Susie Wiles hit D.C. Tuesday and provides a stark view of her opinion of Musk, recently one of the most powerful people in the United States government with a small army of minions who oversaw the disassembling of the nationâs foreign assistance apparatus amid a campaign of unchecked cost-cutting across the federal government.
Wiles gave an almost completely unguarded critique of her colleagues, including the president, and the dynamics that let to a perception of abject chaos surrounding the White House for the first half of 2025. In a statement released on Musk-owned X following the articleâs publication, Wiles and the White House lashed out at Whipple and Vanity Fair over the direct quotes published by the news organization. She did not dispute their veracity.
It was against Musk that Wiles levied the strongest criticisms as she portrayed his leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency â âDOGEâ â as a messy and poorly-managed initiative that held true to the âmove fast and break thingsâ motif, stopping only to inform the White House after plans were already in motion. That applied to USAID, which the chief of staff said that Musk told the White House he was dismantling as he was âalready into itâ.
âThe challenge with Elon is keeping up with him,â Wiles said of Musk in one conversation that occurred during his DOGE tenure, according to Vanity Fair. âHeâs an avowed ketamine [user]. And he sleeps in a sleeping back in the [Executive Office Building] in the daytime.â
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Susie Wiles unloaded on Elon Musk in a Vanity Fair article that has drawn strong reactions.
(Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Further describing Musk as an âodd, odd duckâ whose eccentricities were ânot helpful,â Wiles strongly critiqued the dismantling of USAID: âI was initially aghast, because I think anybody that pays attention to government and has ever paid attention to USAID believed, as I did, that they do very good work.â
She went on to say that Musk shuttered programs meant to save lives including disruptions to the AIDS treatment program were done against the presidentâs wishes. U.N. officials have warned that the disruptions to the aids program will result in millions of more deaths from HIV/AIDS over the next five years.
âNo rational person could think the USAID process was a good one. Nobody,â Wiles said, explaining that she had to inform Musk he didnât have the authority to lock officials out of their offices.
The White House chief of staff was equally blunt about the reason that Muskâs destruction of USAID and the disruptions to key programs werenât stopped: Because Donald Trump didnât know about them or care about them.
âThe president doesnât know and never will,â she said during one of 11 interviews with Vanity Fair for the piece. âHe doesnât know the details of these smallish agencies.â
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Trump âdoesnât know the detailsâ of what agencies like USAID do, Wiles claimed in her interviews.
(AFP/Getty)
The comment was jarring, given the amount of policymaking and agency leadership the White House has centralized in the West Wing over the past year and reveals the newfound importance and power that Trumpâs unelected advisers such as Stephen Miller still maintain within the Executive Branch.
Muskâs dismantling of USAID occurred in the earliest days of the administration and during the Tesla chiefâs first few weeks on the job in the White House. The agency, established during the Cold War, was a chief instrument of American diplomacy, influence and support for developing countries.
âWe spent the weekend feeding USAID into the wood chipper,â Musk boasted in one social media post, arguing: âUSAID is a criminal organization.â
open image in gallery
Elon Musk was recently at the White House, stoking speculation he could be back in Trumpâs good graces after they had a public falling out.
(AFP via Getty Images)
More than 80 percent of the USAIDâs work was ended after a six-week review led by DOGE and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who oversees USAID under traditional federal structures.
Rubio was appointed as USAIDâs acting administrator in February and in August handed the role off to Russ Vought, another fiscal hawk and close ally of the president whom Rubio said would close down the agency entirely. Only an act of Congress would legally be able to do that, but itâs unclear what functions the agency still continues to perform given that the Secretary of State oversaw a shift of âcore programsâ to the State Department itself.
âSince January, weâve saved the taxpayers tens of billions of dollars. And with a small set of core programs moved over to the State Department, USAID is officially in close out mode,â said Rubio in August.
Musk recently visited the White House for the first time since his unceremonious ousting earlier this year and the explosive break-up he had with Donald Trump over X.
The former DOGE chief accused Trump of being âin the Epstein filesâ and attacked Republicans over congressional spending levels, before easing up on his criticism.
In an interview with Katie Miller, wife of Stephen Miller, last week Musk claimed that DOGE was âsomewhat successfulâ in reaching its cost-cutting goals but said he wouldnât launch the initiative again, if given the chance by Trump. The agency, which had been officially disbanded by November of 2025, claimed to have cut $214 billion in spending during its tenure but the actual figure is unverified and seemingly a mystery to many in Washington given the lack of congressional oversight and factual information released by the White House.
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