USAID security officials on leave after refusing access to Musk allies
The
move by the Trump administration comes as billionaire and Trump ally
Elon Musk has been denigrating USAID, the world’s largest provider of
food assistance.
USAID
humanitarian aid at a warehouse at the Tienditas International Bridge
on the border between Colombia and Venezuela in February 2019. (Fernando
Vergara/AP)
The
Trump administration has removed two top security officials at the U.S.
Agency for International Development after they refused to let
representatives of Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency”
access restricted spaces at the agency on Saturday, said current and
former USAID officials.
The
placement of the security officials — John Voorhees and his deputy — on
administrative leave is the latest effort by the Trump administration
and Musk to wrest control of the world’s largest provider of food assistance,
which they have denigrated without offering evidence as left-wing and
corrupt amid objections from Democratic and Republican lawmakers.
Amid
the turmoil at the agency, Matt Hopson, the USAID chief of staff and a
political appointee, resigned, according to a current and former USAID
official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive
situation. Hopson did not respond to requests for comment.
Voorhees was put on leave after he did not allow DOGE officials to access a sensitive compartmented information facility — commonly known as a “SCIF”
— an ultra-secure room where officials and government contractors take
extraordinary precautions to review highly classified information,
according to three current and former USAID officials.
A
group of about eight DOGE officials entered the USAID building Saturday
and demanded access to every door and floor, despite only a few of them
having security clearance, according to senior Senate Democratic staff
members who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the
incident.
When
USAID personnel attempted to block access to some areas, DOGE officials
threatened to call federal marshals, one of the Democratic aides said.
The DOGE officials were eventually given access to “secure spaces”
including the security office.
Katie Miller, a spokeswoman for DOGE, said on X that “no classified material was accessed without proper security clearances.”
The
Senate Democratic staffer also said top officials from USAID’s office
and the bulk of the staff in USAID’s Bureau for Legislative and Public
Affairs were put on leave later Saturday. Some of them were not notified
but had their access to agency terminals suspended.
On
Sunday, Musk repeatedly attacked USAID on X, calling the long-standing
government agency “evil” and a “viper’s nest of radical-left marxists
who hate America.”
“USAID is a criminal organization,” he added. “Time for it to die.”
Established
in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy, USAID oversees a vast portfolio
of programs designed to provide humanitarian relief, combat poverty,
support global health and more. In 2023, it managed appropriations worth
$40 billion, according to the Congressional Research Service. USAID is
present in more than 100 countries from Ukraine to Peru. The agency’s
staff numbers more than 10,000, the majority of whom are overseas.
By
Sunday afternoon, USAID’s X account had been taken down, with a message
saying the account “doesn’t exist.” The agency’s Instagram account was
also taken offline.
USAID’s
website has been down since Saturday. It was not immediately clear
whether it was taken down because of the Trump administration’s focus on
the agency or was down because of technical problems.
The news of the top two security officials being put on leave was earlier reported by CNN.
Top-ranking
Democrats on Sunday demanded explanations for the DOGE officials’
actions and the sudden departure of the USAID security leaders.
Sen.
Jeanne Shaheen (D-New Hampshire), the top Democrat on the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, told The Washington Post that she is
“seeking immediate answers about any implications for our national
security and are bringing a group of bipartisan Senators together on
this as soon as the Senate comes back tomorrow.”
“Reports
that individuals without appropriate clearance may have accessed
classified USAID spaces as well as American citizens’ personal
information are incredibly serious and unprecedented,” Shaheen said.
Sen.
Tim Kaine (D-Virginia), who sits on the same committee, said there is
“no circumstance under which individuals without proper security
clearances should be given access to our nation’s most sensitive secrets
and systems.”
“This
is exactly what China, Russia and Iran want,” Kaine said. “This
potentially criminal incident must be investigated thoroughly and
immediately. I commend the efforts of USAID staff who have shown time
and again that their first and foremost priority is serving their
country, not the whims of an unelected and corrupt billionaire.”
President Donald Trump
named Musk, the world’s richest man, as the head of DOGE, a new
government office that was initially promised to comb through the whole
federal bureaucracy searching for deep cuts. In the days since Trump
took office, Musk has sought to exert sweeping control over the inner
workings of the U.S. government, installing longtime surrogates at
several agencies, including the Office of Personnel Management, which
essentially handles federal human resources, and the General Services
Administration, which manages real estate.
DOGE
is now housed in a White House office formerly known as the U.S.
Digital Service but now called the U.S. DOGE Service and has broad
visibility into technology across the government.
The administration’s move to push out the top security officials at USAID comes a day after Musk’s DOGE deputies gained access
to a sensitive Treasury Department system responsible for trillions of
dollars in U.S. government payments after the administration ousted a top career official at the department, according to three people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe government deliberations.
Jeff Stein contributed to this report.