Inside the ambitious plan to undo DOGE's damage
Briefly

Inside the ambitious plan to undo DOGE's damage
""It's the combination of rigid short deadlines, such as legislation or election calendars, and every action happening extremely slowly,""
""It's good to slow down and be careful when figuring out how a change is going to impact people," "It's not good when minor technical decision requires approval from 35 committee members, representing 40 different agendas. That second type of slowness needs to be pruned way back.""
Tech Viaduct comprises former senior officials from U.S. Digital Service, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the General Services Administration. The initiative develops a tactical plan for rapid repair and improvement of federal digital presence, services, and processes. The plan includes options calibrated to political circumstances, from day-one executive actions to broader reforms that could secure congressional support. Urgency stems from short political mandates and entrenched administrative slowness. Minor technical decisions frequently require approval from many committees with diverse agendas, producing counterproductive delays that the plan seeks to reduce.
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