
The End of Musk-Led Policy, Federal Employees Say Goodbye to Weekly Report System
The U.S. federal administrative system is undergoing significant changes. On Tuesday local time, the Trump administration announced the abolition of the "Weekly Five Work Achievements Report Plan" implemented during billionaire and former advisor Elon Musk's tenure in government. Initially established as a symbol of efficiency and accountability, this system has now been officially abandoned as a reform experiment.
According to the latest internal memorandum from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), the agency will no longer require federal employees to submit weekly work summaries on schedule or oversee related processes. This marks the official end of Musk's administrative efforts to improve government efficiency.
OPM States: Management Should be Controlled Directly by Leadership
In an accompanying statement, OPM Director Scott Kupor noted that the agency believes daily work management should be flexibly controlled by departmental supervisors, without relying on formalistic email systems. He emphasized, "We have other mature, effective management mechanisms that allow leadership to grasp employee performance."
This statement reflects a deep reflection on Musk's plan - while emphasizing result orientation, it also recognizes that rigid system designs may backfire, causing dissatisfaction among grassroots employees and increasing administrative costs.
Musk's Reform Vision: From High-Profile Inception to Quiet Departure
In 2024, Musk joined the Trump administration with a strong call for streamlining government, leading the establishment of the "Department of Government Efficiency" (DOGE), responsible for slimming down federal agencies and improving efficiency. Under his advocacy, federal agencies successively implemented a series of reform measures such as budget cuts, staff optimization, and the weekly report system.
However, this plan did not achieve the desired effect. Internal documents reveal that some agency employees viewed the "weekly report system" as a formalistic burden, which instead compressed actual working time. Some departments even experienced a phenomenon of "doing things just to write weekly reports."
In May 2025, Musk announced his departure from the government, citing a desire to return to the tech industry, and the reforms he pushed within the administrative system lost momentum.
Trump and Musk: From Partners to Policy Divergence
Despite Musk investing over $250 million to help Trump win re-election, policy differences gradually emerged between them. Especially in fiscal policy, Musk criticized Trump's tax cut bill as "short-sighted" and expressed concerns over federal budget expansion.
This rift eventually erupted in public. Trump countered Musk's lack of "political judgment" on multiple occasions, and their cooperative relationship gradually cooled.
The abolition of the weekly report plan is seen by the outside world as a symbolic action of the Trump administration's complete separation from Musk.
Behind the Policy Termination: The Realities of Efficiency Reforms
Observers point out that the concept of Musk's weekly report system, while aiming to improve accountability and transparency, lacked flexibility and a human-centered management perspective, failing to truly take root in the vast federal system. Many employees privately reported that the reporting system created an additional burden, affecting work enthusiasm.
At the same time, many high-profile reforms initiated during Musk's tenure lacked systematic evaluation mechanisms, sustainable execution power, and feedback loops, which is also a deep-seated reason why his reform plans were ultimately shelved.
Will Administrative Reforms Return to a Steady Path?
With the completion of Musk's reform legacy liquidation, the Trump administration may return to a more cautious and practical path in administrative reforms. Industry insiders believe that the focus in the future may be on promoting data-driven management methods, enhancing diversity in performance evaluation tools, among other directions.
Although the "weekly report system" has become history, the discussion on how to improve the efficiency of the federal government is far from over. For the public, this is both an opportunity for systemic reflection and a pragmatic lesson on the boundaries of political and corporate culture integration.

