The Voice News:STARBASE, Texas — Elon Musk has returned to his home turf—far removed from the political trenches of Washington, D.C.—to refocus his energy on what he calls his “true mission”: advancing humanity toward interplanetary life. Standing at the heart of SpaceX’s Starbase facility in South Texas, where the heat rises from the marshes and rockets scrape the sky, Musk declared that his attention is now squarely on launching Starship, the world’s most powerful rocket, and realizing his long-standing ambition to colonize Mars.
“This is the focus,” Musk said in an interview at the sprawling production floor. “Everything comes together at the moment of launch.”
Gone were the echoes of Washington politics—the Dark MAGA baseball cap, the combative rhetoric, the ambitious but fraught attempts to reform federal bureaucracy through his role in the Directorate of Government Efficiency (DOGE). After months of public backlash, legislative resistance, and a flurry of lawsuits, Musk acknowledged that reshaping the U.S. government turned out to be just as hard, if not harder, than rocket science.
“The federal bureaucracy is much worse than I realized,” Musk admitted. “Trying to improve things in D.C. is truly an uphill battle.”
Musk’s appointment to lead DOGE—intended to streamline government functions and slash inefficiency—sparked a polarizing national debate. Critics decried his sweeping cuts to public sector roles and questioned the legitimacy of his methods. Musk says the criticism became disproportionate and indiscriminate.
“DOGE just became the whipping boy,” he said. “If something went wrong anywhere, we got blamed for it—even when we had nothing to do with it.”
The backlash was not limited to the political arena. He pointed out that some angry citizens responded by setting Tesla cars ablaze. “That’s really uncool,” he said, shaking his head.
Though Musk is scaling back his political engagement, he insists he hasn’t abandoned DOGE entirely. Instead of high-profile structural overhauls, he now aims to focus on targeted technological improvements, particularly in outdated federal IT systems.
“There are situations, even in the intelligence community, where to move data from one computer to another, you have to print it out and manually retype it,” Musk said, visibly frustrated. “This is just insane.”
He added that future DOGE efforts would prioritize “high gain for the pain” projects—initiatives that can deliver measurable benefits with minimal disruption, such as combating waste and fraud.
Yet, despite bold promises of cost savings, Musk’s previous claims have been scrutinized and, in many cases, found to be exaggerated. According to independent analyses, several of his cost-cutting measures produced marginal gains while causing significant institutional disruption.
Now back at SpaceX, Musk has visibly re-immersed himself in the company’s boldest initiative: developing Starship, a next-generation reusable spacecraft intended to support both NASA’s Artemis moon missions and Musk’s vision for Mars colonization. Wearing a black “Occupy Mars” T-shirt and projecting the intensity of a battlefield commander, Musk reiterated his belief that SpaceX must operate with a “maniacal sense of urgency.”