Friday, 04 Apr 2025

UN watchdog project calls on DOGE Caucus to 'audit' the International org

DOGE-U.N., a private initiative, is looking to help the Senate DOGE Caucus identify waste within the United Nations and reevaluate U.S. funding.


UN watchdog project calls on DOGE Caucus to 'audit' the International org
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Dynamic Oversight for Global Efficiencies in the U.N. (DOGE-U.N.) is looking to help the caucus identify cost-cutting opportunities and hold the U.N. accountable.

"Accountability should extend beyond domestic institutions to global organizations that America funds. And they all should operate with fiscal responsibility and proper oversight," DOGE-U.N. wrote in a letter to Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, who founded the Senate DOGE Caucus.

"For at least the past seven years, the United Nations has faced a liquidity crisis given the fact that not all member states pay in full, and many member states also do not pay on time," secretary-general spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric told Fox News Digital at the time. "This is about prudent spending planning to ensure that we can continue to fulfill our core functions and the mandates given to us by member states."

Hugh Dugan, the head of DOGE-U.N., told Fox News Digital that this is an opportunity to reform the U.N., which has not undergone any significant overhaul since 2000. Dugan also emphasized that the U.N. should be under this type of scrutiny more frequently and not just when the U.S. is "frustrated with" the organization.

Dugan told Fox News Digital that a significant portion of USAID funding was "funneled" through U.N. entities. He believes the "money trail will definitely be taking us through many of those entities, whether it's peacekeeping or a U.N. development program."

In its letter, DOGE-U.N. lists several recommendations for the DOGE Caucus, including decentralizing New York-based U.N. entities to lower-cost countries, which the organization said could save "at least 40% in salaries alone." DOGE-U.N. also recommends an audit of the U.N.'s ongoing "liquidity crisis."

The U.S. is not the only country rethinking its contributions to the international body. Dugan told Fox News Digital that other countries are also reevaluating their spending, but the U.S. is "the most colorful and biggest" because of Musk.

Dugan ultimately pointed the finger at Guterres and told Fox News Digital that there are "whispers and grumblings among ambassadors" who are allegedly dissatisfied with the secretary-general's performance. Senior U.N. insiders allegedly told Dugan that they too are "very eager" to see things turn around "sooner rather than later."

Ernst's office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

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