The task force has estimated total savings of more than $214 billion, an amount it
says equates to roughly $1,329 per taxpayer.
The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) said federal agencies terminated or scaled back 14 additional contracts over the past two days, cutting nearly $98 million in spending in a Christmas Eve update that described the cancellations as a purge of “naughty” government deals.
“Over the last 2 days, agencies terminated and descoped 14 NAUGHTY contracts with a ceiling value of $190M and savings of $98M,” DOGE wrote. “Including a $27k [Veterans Affairs] utilities contract for ‘two 8-passenger golf carts.’ Merry Xmas!”
Contract Review Continues
The Christmas Eve update follows a larger announcement earlier this week in which DOGE said agencies had terminated or reduced 55 contracts with a combined ceiling value of $863 million over a five-day period, eliminating an estimated $261 million in spending tied to what the task force described as “wasteful.”Among the contracts canceled earlier this week was a $1.6 million Housing and Urban Development agreement for support management services intended to “provide coherent, accurate, comprehensive, timely and current digital news,” DOGE said. Another involved a $4.5 million Health and Human Services consulting contract for the “coordination of quality and public reporting programs and websites.”
‘Promises Made, Promises Kept’
DOGE estimates that total savings since its creation now exceed $214 billion, an amount the task force says equates to roughly $1,329 per taxpayer. The savings figure includes reductions tied not only to contract cancellations, but also to asset sales, workforce reductions, interest savings, regulatory changes, grant cancellations, and the elimination of fraud and improper payments.According to DOGE, the Department of Health and Human Services accounts for the largest share of savings to date, followed by the General Services Administration, the Social Security Administration, the Office of Personnel Management, and the Small Business Administration.
The contract terminations come amid broader federal workforce reductions under President Donald Trump, who has pledged to shrink the size of the federal bureaucracy, streamline government operations, and reduce long-term spending obligations.
‘Zombie Payments’
Former DOGE head Elon Musk offered an assessment of the initiative’s performance in a wide-ranging podcast interview earlier this month, saying the task force was “somewhat successful” in curbing wasteful federal spending while acknowledging the effort fell short of its most ambitious goals.DOGE initially aimed to identify as much as $2 trillion in waste and fraud, a target Musk later revised to $1 trillion. While that goal was not reached, Musk said the initiative nevertheless halted large volumes of spending that lacked clear justification.
“I mean, we stopped a lot of funding that really just made no sense, that was entirely wasteful,” he said, estimating that improper or unnecessary “zombie payments” totaled between $100 billion and $200 billion annually.
Musk said DOGE focused on enforcing basic accountability measures, including requiring valid payment codes and explanations for federal disbursements—steps he said were often missing.
“Simply by enforcing that there be a payment code and an explanation for the payment, that payment wouldn’t go out,” he said. “It seems insanely obvious, but there are just, call it, 2 or 3 percent of government payments that go out that really should not be going out.”

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