I said right after the election the foreign policy and econ institutions would be the first and easiest to deconstruct. I also said the Intelligence, Main Justice, National Security and Defense apparatus would be the most difficult.
Here’s the high elevation picture of how it works. The more President Trump (the Executive Branch) doesn’t use the institution, the easier it is to take them apart. Foreign policy is being run out of the White House, with Rubio doing well. All economic policy is being run out of the White House, with Bessent and Lutnick doing well.
[Meanwhile, Trump is ignoring (for now) the CIA silo, as if they didn’t exist; but that cannot last long (see Ukraine). HHS, Ed, Energy, Interior and EPA are making slow and steady progress]
Conversely, President Trump leaves Pam Bondi (Justice), Kash Patel (FBI) and Tulsi Gabbard (DNI) to run/manage their own shops. It’s an issue of (in)ability, and you can see Main Justice and the FBI remains a hot mess. Bondi and Patel refuse to call their institutions corrupt, so the operators within them just keep doing what they have always done. This was predictable, if you just look honestly at the big picture dynamic.
Today, Marco Rubio starts taking apart around 20% of Foggy Bottom. “The Trump administration has begun an aggressive shake-up at the State Department that will close 132 agency offices, including those launched to further human rights, advance democracy overseas, counter extremism, and prevent war crimes.” {READ MORE}
MARCO RUBIO – “Today America confronts a new era of great power competition and the rise of a multipolar order with a State Department that stifles creativity, lacks accountability, and occasionally veers into outright hostility to American interests. The Department has long struggled to perform basic diplomatic functions, even as both its size and cost to the American taxpayer has ballooned over the past fifteen years.
The problem is not a lack of money, or even dedicated talent, but rather a system where everything takes too much time, costs too much money, involves too many individuals, and all too often ends up failing the American people.”
“Bureaus and offices fight to be included on the approval chains for the most mundane of memos, only then to reach agreement on drafts that are bloated in length while stripped of all meaning. Motivated and creative State Department employees see their ideas watered down by turf battles until they give up, disillusioned, while the inboxes of senior officials are inundated with hundreds of requests for approval. While the talented and loyal are driven into indifference, radical ideologues and bureaucratic infighters have learned to play on this exhaustion to push through their own agendas that are often at odds with those of the President and undermine the interests of the United States.
An example of an out-of-control Department is the Global Engagement Center (GEC) that I shuttered last week. The office engaged with media outlets and platforms to censor speech it disagreed with, including that of the President of the United States, who its director in 2019 accused of employing “the same techniques of disinformation as the Russians.” Despite Congress voting to shutter it, the GEC simply renamed itself and continued operating as if nothing had changed.
Unless we confront the underlying bureaucratic culture that prevents the State Department from carrying out an effective foreign policy, while allowing offices like GEC to flourish in the shadows, nothing will change. That is why I am initiating a broad reorganization of the Department to address the steady growth of bureaucracy, duplication of functions, and capture by special interests that have crippled American Foreign Policy.
We will drain the bloated, bureaucratic swamp, empowering the Department from the ground up. That means regional bureaus and our embassies will now have the tools necessary to advance America’s interests abroad because region-specific functions will be streamlined to increase functionality. Redundant offices will also be removed, and non-statutory programs misaligned with America’s core national interests will cease to exist. All non-security foreign assistance will be consolidated in regional bureaus charged with implementing U.S. foreign policy in specific geographic areas.
This will ensure every bureau and office in the Department of State has clear responsibility and mission. If something concerns Africa, the bureau of African Affairs will handle it. Economic policy will be consolidated under the Under Secretary for Economic Growth, Energy, and Environment, while the responsibilities for security assistance and arms control will be united under the Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security.
Until now, overlapping mandates paired with conflicting responsibilities created an environment ripe for ideological capture and meaningless turf wars. With a bloated budget and unclear mandate, the expansive domain of the former Under Secretary for Civilian Security, Human Rights, and Democracy (known internally as the “J Family”), provided a fertile environment for activists to redefine “human rights” and “democracy” and to pursue their projects at the taxpayer expense, even when they were in direct conflict with the goals of the Secretary, the President, and the American people.
The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor became a platform for left-wing activists to wage vendettas against “anti-woke” leaders in nations such as Poland, Hungary, and Brazil, and to transform their hatred of Israel into concrete policies such as arms embargoes. The Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration funneled millions of taxpayer dollars to international organizations and NGOs that facilitated mass migration around the world, including the invasion on our southern border.
To transfer the remaining functions of USAID to such a monstrosity of bureaus would be to undo DOGE’s work to build a more efficient and accountable government. Consequently, the bureaus and offices in the J Family will be placed under the new Coordinator for Foreign Assistance and Humanitarian Affairs charged with returning them to their original mission of advancing human rights and religious freedom, not promoting radical causes at taxpayer expense.
The American people deserve a State Department willing and able to advance their safety, security, and prosperity around the world, one respectful of their tax dollars and the sacred trust of government service, and one prepared to meet the immense challenges of the 21st Century. Starting this week, they will have one.” (link)

Way to go Marco Rubio!
This is fun to observe from afar.
The more federal employees are let go the better the chance for improving those organizations by eliminating the left leaning bias so many of the employees have.
I feel like all these depts were curated not just with leftists but greedy, competitive, weak, lazy, smart but ideologically stupid, drug addicted, pedos, … whatever gross soup they needed to keep those in the dept easily manipulated and under control.
Interestingly, it seems to be the type that are lost without such ‘management’ and direction, making the groups they are in easy to break apart and dismantle.
“Bondi and Patel refuse to call their institutions corrupt…”
They sure didn’t get nominated for these roles by making supportive statements of the status quote. Kashyup was most expressive about his disdain for the FBI inhabitants. What changed? Was he bullshtng all along for MAGA clicks? I need to know who this guy really is.
Trump chose Bondi and Patel. Trump knows who he “really is”.
He’s showing us who he really is, weak and easily intimidated.
Patel is demonstrating who he really is. So disappointing. He isn’t up to the task.
The problem with this is that, if they are investigating or calling for a grand jury, it has to be done in total confidentiality. You don’t want to uncover what you are about to do. Remember, you have to win in court.
He was on Bannon every dang week calling out the deep state.
This level of corruption cannot be fixed in two months. Give them some time. I believe we will not be disappointed.
Even Rubio was suspect at first. This is quite a deep dive with names and receipts. Give it a minute as Trump goes seemingly one dept at a time, with other factions more than likely to hide, hoping it doesn’t happen to them, rather than all combining what strength they have left and rising up en masse, together having nothing left to lose.
I was very dubious about Rubio, having lived in FL and voting for him twice. This is a very good start…
To date the most effective Cabinet members are Rubio and Hegseth.
Agreed, two of the best.
I have to throw in an honorable mention to Lee Zeldin at EPA. Trash canning the Endangerment Finding is YUGE.
Yep, Zeldin is off most people’s radar and he takes advantage of that. Rubio I must say is a big surprise. Foggy is a tough nut with all those light in the loafer snobs.
Did he ? Last I saw it was still being reviewed.
The same person that chose Rubio for State chose Bondi for DOJ, and Patel for FBI.
He also chose Sessions and Barr.
Negative.
You can’t talk about the good without also mentioning the bad. This is how we got to the place we are today, people turn a blind eye to the truth to hold firm to their narrative. The truth is Trump has made good and terrible picks to his cabinet.
NOPE … the “McConnell List” chose sessions & Barr.
I don’t think McConnell was ever President, but thanks.
McConnell controlled Who would get confirmed. Period.
Trump was forced to nominate those acceptable to McConnell. McConnell also kept the Senate “in session” the entire for year term so there was no ability to make a recess appointment.
In my opinion it was an appeasement, throwing the opposition a bone, in order to get others like Hegseth in particular along with RFK Jr. approved.
President Trump will deal with Bondi and Patel later, after the Ukraine debacle is untangled.
There seems to be a pattern now in media, of Modified Limited Hangouts raining down.
Advancing narratives that it is only haphazard incompetence, self-dealing, bureaucracy, etc. causing the US government “public-private partnership” to add weight behind the monumental evils sinking the US.
(As opposed to a coordinated Plan to manage the decline of the US, covertly nudged by opaque uber-powerful state entities which spent decades building systems to effect global manipulations, centered in zip code 22101.)
For example, the [plandemic and shots] program is being blamed on simple greed, tribalism, incompetence, etc. – even the globally coordinated propaganda, censorship, and collusion, driving fear, suppressing safe alternative covid mitigations, and forcing mass modRNA injections in the West. (But NOT the other nations.)
Here, the quote by Rubio repeats the narrative: Simple bureaucratic bloat, incompetence, etc.
Repeating the message is standard propaganda technique.
This messaging is pervasive now. It looks like coordinated Limited Hangout cover. Even the DOGE actions reinforce it – and because DOGE knew full well before they even started that they would only cut a couple percent of the federal budget, yet lied to us that big cuts were their raison d’être, it looks like adding to the cover story blanketing everything was one of their real goals.
The narrative is being reinforced, as the framework to complete the controlled demolition is being finalized:
Sovereign Debt.
Military depletion.
Replicons.
Get Gaetz off the sidelines, & in at DOJ. Put the RINOs, & the Left, back on the defensive.
Can’t be worse than what we have right now.
& Kash Patel- seriously?
This guy said he was going to turn FBI HQ into a museum for the Deep State.
Where the hell is Congress to help us put down the judicial insurrection, codify EOs, & cut spending?
Same tactic, ignoring them til it’s their turn to get dismantled.
With a bloated bureaucracy such as at the State Department it would seem employees are tripping over each other, or over their own feet in an environment where more hired help brings less results.
As a person who worked in the foreign service for 15 years, I applaud Marco.
Trump can ‘ignore’ the CIA as he eliminates the theaters it operates in. Then follow the money, establish the unauthorized (and illegal/evil)operations, proof of the problem, and start dismembering the entire IC. Ending monetary support for Ukraine is a big part of this, it will expose the IC’s actions and make the case obvious.
Justice/FBI are probably in the same mode, let the directors continue to expose the evil and slice off parts. Eventually, wholesale reductions.
And reducing the size of our federal government is crucial. Cutting it down to the nessential and necessary, keep the staff too busy doing that work to get into more trouble. The Leftist think tanks will take up the slack, at no expense to taxpayers.
Patel and Bondi seem to be Anger Mgrs of sorts not for the public, actually kind of, but more for those within their depts until it’s time to dismantle them the same way Rubio is going after the State Dept.
Fire every communist in the state dept.
There would be no one left to turn the lights off.
Lol
https://x.com/Bishop_Sheen/status/1915179965563253094
‘…The problem is not a lack of money, or even dedicated talent, but rather a system where everything takes too much time, costs too much money, involves too many individuals, and all too often ends up failing the American people.” ‘
What happens when a bureaucracy is decimated by rapid cuts?
The sclerotic system cannot adapt as needed, and the remaining bureaucrats are grossly overloaded trying to deal with it in a hostile work environment where stability and trust are destroyed, so dysfunctions multiply.
This is not something like Twitter turned into X by firing people and keeping only the highest-performing 21-40 year olds willing and able to work 80 hour workweeks year-round out of fear of job loss, including a substantial contingent of H-1B serfs.
DOGE, Rubio, and the other slashers know all this. So apparently the goals are exactly this: Cripple the government agencies.
This starts to make sense when considering the DoD Civilian workforce cuts which decimate DoD acquisitions, if the goals are to further weaken the US military.
This, in a nutshell, ‘Despite Congress voting to shutter it, the GEC simply renamed itself and continued operating as if nothing had changed.’