Elon Musk and President Trump are fighting a court order to turn over information about DOGE, the US Department of Government Efficiency.
US District Judge Tanya Chutkan ruled last week that New Mexico and 13 other states suing Musk and the federal government can serve their written discovery requests on Musk, the US Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) Service, and US DOGE Temporary Organization. The states' lawsuit alleges violations of the US Constitution's appointments clause and conduct in excess of statutory authority.
"Plaintiffs' requests, as amended by the court, are reasonable and narrowly tailored to their request for injunctive relief," and "expedited discovery is reasonable and necessary to evaluate Plaintiffs' request for injunctive relief," Chutkan, a judge at US District Court for the District of Columbia, wrote in a memorandum opinion.
Plaintiffs said they aren't seeking information from Trump himself and did not ask for depositions of either Trump or Musk. But in a challenge to the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, government attorneys said the discovery is "intrusive" and contrary to "separation-of-powers principles and the 'high respect' that courts must afford the President in the conduct of his constitutional duties."
"The district court's order permits plaintiffs to take sweeping and intrusive discovery into the operations of the Office of the President, requiring the Chief Executive to produce information detailing both the substance of the advice provided by his closest advisors and the process through which that advice was formulated and communicated to the President and other Executive Branch officials," said an emergency motion for a stay of the ruling.
Filing: Musk’s advice to Trump should be secret
There is also a petition to quash the District Court order filed yesterday by Musk, Trump, and DOGE. It said:
The district court's broadly phrased and premature discovery order raises grievous separation-of-powers concerns. It requires the government to produce information regarding the activities of the US DOGE Service (USDS)—an organization within the Executive Office of the President—and close presidential advisor Elon Musk. The order requires the White House to provide detailed information regarding the substance of the advice USDS and Mr. Musk have provided and the process through which that advice has been formulated and communicated within the Executive Branch. This unusual and highly invasive order threatens "the Executive's interests in maintaining the autonomy of its office and safeguarding the confidentiality of its communications" and fails to accord the "high respect that is owed to the office of the Chief Executive" in the conduct of litigation.
Discovery should be a last resort and not conducted "at the very outset of the case, before any motion for a preliminary injunction and before resolving the government's motion to dismiss, which could obviate the need for discovery altogether or substantially narrow it," the petition said.