The acting Social Security Administration (SSA) head called off shutting down the agency after he previously said he would do so in the aftermath of a temporary court order that blocked Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) officials from accessing data.
The judge had given the agency “clarifying guidance” about the temporary order related to DOGE workers at the agency, according to his statement.
In the aftermath of the order, Dudek told several media outlets that he may be forced to shut down the SSA.
“Really, I want to turn it off and let the courts figure out how they want to run a federal agency.”
“Employees of SSA who are not involved with the DOGE Team or in the work of the DOGE Team are not subject to the Order,” Hollander wrote on March 21 in a letter to attorneys involved in the case. “Moreover, any suggestion that the Order may require the delay or suspension of benefit payments is incorrect.”
Hollander stated that her order “applies only to SSA employees working on the DOGE agenda” and doesn’t have any impact on SSA operations.
“In fact, if others at SSA are involved with DOGE, as Mr. Dudek seems to claim,” she said, “then I was misled by counsel for the government.”
They wrote that DOGE’s activity in the agency responsible for sending out Social Security and Social Security Disability Insurance payments every month to millions of people could potentially expose the personal data of millions of Americans.
Lawyers for the Trump administration argued that the unions and other groups who filed the complaint lacked the standing to do so and were unable to provide evidence that they could face imminent harm if DOGE continues to access the agency’s data.
Established by Trump based on an existing agency soon after he took office, DOGE—led by tech billionaire and Trump adviser Elon Musk—was set up to root out fraud, abuse, and waste inside the federal government. However, DOGE has faced a number of lawsuits in recent weeks, although judges have not always agreed with the plaintiffs challenging the agency.