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BREAKING: Supreme Court Gives DOGE TWO HUGE Wins!

Big win for DOGE — and a big day for transparency and accountability.
The Supreme Court just handed down two major victories for the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), and both could have a massive impact moving forward.
First, SCOTUS has officially cleared the way for DOGE to access Social Security data that it’s been requesting for months. Lower courts had repeatedly blocked the department, citing federal privacy laws, but now the high court has overruled those decisions.
This means DOGE can finally move forward with its promised full-scale audit — and many are wondering what they’ll uncover now that they can dig into records the Deep State clearly didn’t want exposed.
According to Fox News, the data includes highly sensitive information: Social Security numbers, medical and citizenship records, school histories, and even tax returns for millions of Americans.
The court ruled:
“SSA may proceed to afford members of the SSA DOGE Team access to the agency records in question in order for those members to do their work.”
The decision was split along ideological lines — the six conservative justices approved it, while Justices Jackson, Kagan, and Sotomayor dissented.
And not everyone is thrilled. Senator Elizabeth Warren, in particular, has made her frustration loud and clear.
Second big win: The Court also blocked a separate order that would’ve forced DOGE to hand over internal documents as part of a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit.
CBS News explained that the order temporarily halts the demand for DOGE to turn over records and stops Amy Gleason — identified as the acting head of the agency — from having to sit for a deposition.
The FOIA lawsuit was filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), who claim DOGE operates like a federal agency and therefore should be subject to public records laws. But the Justice Department pushed back, saying DOGE is part of the Executive Office of the President and serves only in an advisory role — meaning FOIA doesn’t apply.
The Supreme Court agreed, stating:
“Any inquiry into whether an entity is an agency… cannot turn on the entity’s ability to persuade.”
The ruling emphasized the importance of respecting separation of powers and not allowing the courts to pry too deeply into internal White House communications.
This decision also split 6–3, with the same three liberal justices dissenting.
For now, DOGE doesn’t have to release its internal documents — and that gives President Trump’s cost-cutting task force more breathing room as it pushes forward with its agenda.
Two rulings. Two major victories. One very good day for DOGE.
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