
First on FOX: Government Efficiency Bureau Fox News Digital has launched a website where Americans can report and propose ways to reconcile policies within the federal government.
“Your voice in federal decision-making” reads the website Regulations.gov, “Are you affected by existing rules or regulations? By completing this form, share your deregulation ideas.”
Doge worked with the Government Services Office, an independent agency that helps support the functioning of other federal agencies, and the Government Services Office, a federal government office that was frequently accused of overseeing deregulation efforts to launch a website earlier this month, Fox Digital learned.
“Doge combines the administration’s goal of reducing transparency with transparency by providing Americans with a unique opportunity to encourage more deregulation actions. President Trump’s priorities “White House spokesman Taylor Rogers told Fox Digital to make people first and government officials last.”

Doge has launched a new website that allows Americans to propose deregulation. (Getty Images)
The website’s main page leads to a form where users can report “deregulation proposals.” This will allow users to provide over 12 prompts regarding their own issues.
Prompts include explaining which federal agencies have facilitated the regulation in question, if regulations are finalized or during the rulemaking process, the legitimation of deregulation, the history of how regulations work, and other details about the regulation.
The form will prompt users to provide their names, but the boxes are not required to be completed before submission. Those who submitted the deregulation proposal could name the Trump administration’s withdrawal of rules after individuals.
“Please answer only if you wish to be named after you or your organization. Providing your name does not guarantee that it will appear in the final agent’s actions and reserves the right to refrain from using inappropriate or offensive names,” the prompt for the user’s name states.
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Doge’s public leader, Elon Muskhas been opposed to government regulations for several months, including participating in President Donald Trump’s campaign in major battlefield states and gaining support.

Elon Musk will speak at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) held in Oxon Hill, Maryland on February 20, 2025. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
At a Pennsylvania rally ahead of the election, Musk recounted how his company SpaceX was wrapped in a “bunch of nut stories” related to government overregulation.
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“We’re going to let you know something crazy, like we were fined $140,000 by the EPA for dumping fresh water on the ground. It’s crazy. We’re going to explore how crazy it is. Last year, Folsom, Pennsylvania.

President Donald Trump will speak at an event on energy production in the Eastern Room of the White House on Tuesday, April 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
“Then the FAA said, ‘No, I have to pay a $140,000 fine.” And we said, “But Starbase is constantly falling in tropical thunderstorm areas,” Musk said, referring to SpaceX’s headquarters in Texas. “It’s the same water we used,” so it’s… no harm to anything. And they said, “Yeah, but we didn’t have permission.” “Do you need permission to fresh water?” Musk said.
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Trump continues to deregulate Last week, Blitz targeted energy and climate controls with a series of executive orders aimed at “unlocking” the power of US coal energy.
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“President Trump knows that bureaucracy is built to regulate, rather than relax, and the result is a constant number of regulations that curtail innovation and limit American freedom,” the White House said in an EOS fact sheet last week.