Deputy Commissioner Lee Dudeck issued a statement after a judge ruled against Doge this week, suggesting he might have to close the agency.
The head of the Agency for Social Security (SSA) has stopped closing agents after the government’s Office of Efficiency (DOGE) previously said they would do so in the aftermath of a temporary court order blocking access to data.
The judge, according to his statement, had “clear guidance” on temporary orders related to the agency’s Doge workers.
In the aftermath of the order, Dudek told several media outlets that he could be forced to shut down the SSA.
“Really, I want to turn it off and let the courts understand how they want to run federal agencies.”
“SSA employees who are not involved in the Doge or Doge team work will not be eligible for orders,” Hollander wrote in a letter to an attorney related to the case on March 21. “Additionally, the suggestion that an order may require delays or suspension of payment of benefits is incorrect.”
Hollander said her orders “applies only to SSA employees working on Doge Agenda,” and will not affect the operation of the SSA.
“In fact, as Dudek argues, if anyone else in the SSA was involved in Doge, I was misled by a government lawyer.”
They write that Doge’s activities at an agency responsible for sending monthly Social Security and Social Security Disability Insurance payments to millions of people could potentially make the personal data of millions of Americans public.
Lawyers for the Trump administration argued that the unions and other groups that filed the complaint had no position to do so, and could not provide evidence that Doge could face imminent harm if he continued to access agency data.
Founded by Trump on an existing institution shortly after he took office, Doge, led by a tech billionaire and Trump adviser Elon Musk, was established within the federal government to eradicate fraud, abuse and waste. But Doge has faced many lawsuits in recent weeks, but judges have not agreed to plaintiffs who are constantly challenging the agency.