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>> So, it seems on the surface like 'finding waste' is not the goal.

Finding waste is pretty easy. As we're seeing already, cutting the waste is harder than it looks:

- The Congressional Budget Office recently found that Congress provided $516 billion in appropriations this fiscal year to programs that had expired under federal law.

- Federal government agencies are using just 12% of the space in their headquarters buildings on average, according to the Public Buildings Reform Board, which is an independent federal agency focused on recommending the disposal of underutilized federal properties.

- The House Oversight Committee spent $3.3 billion on furniture over the past few years.

- The federal government made $247 billion worth of payment errors in fiscal year 2022 and $236 billion in 2023, according to the Government Accountability Office.

These errors, also known as improper payments, include overpayments or payments that should not have been made, such as to someone who died or someone no longer eligible for government programs.

Estimates show the federal government spent $2.7 trillion in payment errors since 2003.

https://www.newsnationnow.com/politics/government-waste-inef...




Did any of those findings need teenage hackers to figure out?

Also, by the dates you supplied, it looks like Biden/Democrats were already successfully in-progress of cutting costs.

Every large organization needs reviews/audits to find waste. I think the problem with the 'right' is the idea that because there is waste, we should abolish government. But, every organization accumulates waste, and then needs to have a review process to make corrections. The whole burn it all down is pretty immature take on leadership.




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