Three top officials at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are also set to leave their special government employee roles at the White House, as tech billionaire Elon Musk exits.
A White House official confirmed to The Hill that adviser Steve Davis, adviser and spokesperson Katie Miller and lawyer James Burnham are also departing DOGE.
Davis was a part of DOGE leadership and has worked alongside Musk for years at several of his companies, including SpaceX, the Boring Company and the social media platform X. He was the “chief operating officer” of DOGE and described the work as an “inspiring mission” that was “worth doing” in a March interview with Fox News host Bret Baier.
He joined a briefing with Musk and a small group of reporters at the White House earlier this month, while Musk outlined the work of DOGE and what its future looks like.
Miller, who worked in Trump’s first term and is the wife of deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, was named to the DOGE advisory board in December.
Burnham, who provided general counsel for DOGE, is the president and founder of Vallecito Capital LLC and previously clerked for Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch.
Musk on Wednesday night expressed gratitude to President Trump to mark the end of his special government employee status, which limits him and the others to 130 days in service.