Three senior officials from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) will also leave a special government employee role in the White House with the withdrawal of tech billionaire Elon Musk.
A White House official confirmed to Hill that adviser Steve Davis, adviser and spokesman Katie Miller and attorney James Burnham will also leave Dock.
Davis is a member of Doge’s leadership and has worked with Musk for many years in several of his companies, including SpaceX, Boring Company and social media platform X. He is Doge’s “Chief Operating Officer” and describes the work as an “inspiring task” that was “worth doing” in a March interview with Fox Fox News Hoses.
He attended the briefing earlier this month with Musk and a small group of journalists at the White House, and Musk outlined Dugue’s work and what it looks like in the future.
Miller, who worked in Trump’s first term and was the wife of Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, was appointed to the Doge Advisory Board in December.
Burnham is Doge’s general counsel, president and founder of Vallecito Capital LLC, and previously served as Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch.
Musk expressed his gratitude to President Trump on Wednesday night in honor of the end of his special government employee status, which restricted him and others to 130 days of service.
Musk said he will return to his company full-time, outlining Saturday that he will be “very focused on X/XAI and Tesla (plus next week’s Starship launch).
Questions about who will play Musk’s role to continue Duge’s work, and the White House suggests that no one will replace him and insists that the entire Trump cabinet is joining in the cost-cutting work.