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Why is Elon Musk so obsessed with 'ghost employees'?

Elon Musk delivers remarks during a Cabinet meeting held by President Trump at the White House on Feb. 26.
Andrew Harnik
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Getty Images North America
Elon Musk delivers remarks during a Cabinet meeting held by President Trump at the White House on Feb. 26.

Shortly after Elon Musk's purchase of Twitter in 2022, he sent executives on a mission: Conduct a payroll audit.

Musk wanted to verify that all of the social media platform's employees were "real humans," a request that perplexed executives at the company. Nonetheless, managers were tasked with confirming that some of their direct reports were indeed alive.

"As if there's just people collecting paychecks and not doing anything, as if they don't have supervisors," said Jay Holler, a former supervisor at Twitter who led an engineering team when Musk took over. "The whole idea was just fundamentally absurd and ignorant of how things actually work."

Now, with Musk leading the charge on a White House effort to radically reduce the size of the federal workforce, the billionaire's preoccupation with phantom workers has returned.

In recent weeks, millions of federal employees have been sent emails from a generic government account demanding that they list their weekly accomplishments in five bullet points — messages that have prompted confusion and mixed advice across dozens of federal agencies.

But Musk has made it clear: The emails are aimed at validating existing, breathing employees, a point he emphasized at a Trump administration Cabinet meeting last month.

"They're literally fictional individuals, or someone is collecting a paycheck on a fictional individual," Musk said. "So what we're literally trying to figure out is: Are these people real? Are they alive?"

It was a deja vu moment for former Twitter engineer Yao You, who worked under Musk. To her, the campaign to catch ghost employees lurking on the payroll is really about something else.

"Part of that is making his presence felt very acutely. 'I'm the boss. I'm now overseeing your work. You better make me happy.' So just putting it on people's mind," You said. She noted that Musk showed little tolerance for dissenters at Twitter after his purchase of the company. You sees the emails to government employees as a loyalty test.

"It's not so much about commitment to the company," she said. "In this case, I guess, commitment to the federal government. It's about a personal commitment to Elon Musk."

It's something You got used to following Musk's 2022 hostile acquisition of Twitter for $44 billion, a purchase the tech mogul turned into a splashy photo op by walking into the company's San Francisco headquarters carrying a white porcelain sink. He posted a video of the moment on Twitter with the caption "Entering Twitter HQ — let that sink in!" 

An image from a video posted by Musk on Oct. 26, 2022, shows himself carrying a sink as he entered the Twitter headquarters in San Francisco shortly before he took control of the social media platform he later renamed X.
Twitter account of Elon Musk / AFP
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AFP
An image from a video posted by Musk on Oct. 26, 2022, shows him carrying a sink as he entered the Twitter headquarters in San Francisco shortly before he took control of the social media platform he later renamed X.

After that had sunk in, Musk kicked off the hunt for nonexistent employees just before workers were set to receive a bonus, and Musk would not pay it out until the "ghost employee" theory was investigated, The New York Times reported at the time. Musk eventually renamed the platform X and turned it into a pro-Trump megaphone.

Musk and the White House did not return requests seeking any evidence that the federal government has nonexistent people on its payroll.

The possibility of dead people receiving Social Security checks has also animated Musk. He's said "tens of millions" of dead people are getting the federal support — which is not true.

"Be ready with 50 pages of code"

Some ex-Twitter employees, such as Holler, think the five-bullet-point emails are a performative stunt.

Holler remembers one moment from some of his final days at the company when a message arrived from one of Musk's assistants.

"You're scheduled to meet with Elon at 10:30 this morning. Be ready with 50 pages of code," said Holler, recalling a message he received on Slack, the workplace messaging app.

To check whether Twitter engineers were real, or productive, managers like Holler were told to print out the software code they had recently written, also known as "code commits" in engineering parlance.

"That was an interesting nerd snipe," Holler said. "Because we don't think about code in pages. You don't print code out. It's fundamentally run by computers. You edit it on a computer."

Ian Brown, a former Twitter engineer manager who left before Musk's acquisition, said this idea would be comical if it were not so offensive.

"The culture was absolutely focused on high-performing, talent-dense teams. There was no one phoning it in," Brown said. "The wild sort of paranoia of woke zombies not doing stuff is just complete fantasy."

In the end, Musk scrapped the idea and never evaluated engineers' printed-out software code.

But before he backed away from the plan, the company was — like the whole federal workforce right now — confused, scared and at the unpredictable whim of Elon Musk.

"Nobody is going to thrive in an environment like this," You, the former Twitter engineer, said of working under Musk. "But if the goal is to survive without losing your sanity, supporting each other, just talking through it, and knowing you're not suffering alone can help," she said. "To know you're not suffering silently."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Bobby Allyn is a business reporter at NPR based in San Francisco. He covers technology and how Silicon Valley's largest companies are transforming how we live and reshaping society.