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Two more centralization, cost savings initiatives from GSA

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Two new initiatives are accelerating General Services Administration progress toward centralizing the procurement of common goods and services, simplifying acquisition processes and saving money.

GSA is taking initial steps to set up an Office of Centralized Acquisition Services by recruiting contracting officers to potentially join the new organization.

At the same time, GSA is digging into the value-added reseller (VAR) model to better understand the role of such companies and what it would take for original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to sell directly to the government.

Combined, these two efforts are another signal of the notable changes on the horizon for federal contractors focused on direct sales and coordinated buying.

“We hope companies take it in the spirit of what we are trying to do: save money while transforming the procurement system to make it easier to work with OEMs more consistently, as well as helping agencies focus on their missions and not about buying common goods and services,” said a GSA official, who requested anonymity because they didn’t have permission to speak to the press. “What you are seeing with the OneGov announcements is that we want companies to make direct deals where possible. These companies need to understand our goal to engage more directly with OEMs and work through GSA.”

The four enterprise software license deals GSA signed with Microsoft, Google, Salesforce and Adobe are one step in its plan to contract directly with companies.

The May 28 letter GSA sent to 10 VARs or similar companies is another piece to this effort. The agency gave the VARs a deadline of June 11 to respond with data and details about their model. Federal News Network has learned that GSA is extending the deadline for at least two companies at their request.

The 10 companies are:

  • Carahsoft Technology Corporation
  • CDW Corporation
  • Dell Technologies Inc.
  • FCN Inc.
  • Four Points Technology
  • NANA Regional Corporation,
  • OEP VIII GP (Mythics, LLC)
  • TD Synnex Corporation
  • Thundercat Technology
  • V3Gate LLC

“The letter doesn’t say this, but the tone is more like, the middleman isn’t necessary,” said one industry consultant, who requested anonymity because several of their clients work with GSA. “The thing I think about with these large resellers, there are a number of services they provide, especially for smaller and innovative companies, that keep the barriers to entry low. I could see why a lot of resellers would feel like this puts them in a difficult spot. I think the large ones are maybe even hurt by their own successes. Agencies are comfortable with name of the reseller and what their role is in transactions of connecting industry with the government to meet the agency’s mission.”

These companies won more than $9.5 billion in combined revenue from the government in fiscal 2024, according to federal procurement data analyzed by market research firm Deltek.

GSA said reviewing VARs, moving toward a more direct relationship with OEMs and acting as one unified federal wallet are all parts of the OneGov strategy. According to GSA, the government must move away from bespoke solutions, sourcing more commercial off-the-shelf products and services while also building trust in internal agency capabilities, which means decreasing dependency on outside vendors.

To that end, the Federal Acquisition Service is asking contracting officers if they are interested in joining the new Office of Centralized Acquisition Services. FAS sent out a survey to their employees asking a basic set of questions about contracting officers’ backgrounds and the certifications they hold to gauge interest in current 1102s, the federal job series classification for such roles.

“OCAS will act as the central hub for acquisition execution, supporting agencies as they transition designated contracts to GSA,” Christina Kingsland, acting assistant commissioner of the Office of Travel, Transportation and Logistics, wrote in an email obtained by Federal News Network. “OCAS will operate under a streamlined, standardized model in which GSA provides contracting officers and contract specialists to manage procurement actions. Agencies will retain responsibility for mission requirements, oversight and performance management through their contracting officer representatives and acquisition career managers. With an increasing number of agencies expected to transition concurrently following OMB approval, GSA is proactively planning for the operational demands of implementation.”

Kingsland said in the email the possible reassignment may be “especially relevant if you live more than 50 miles from an approved FAS office location. If you are selected for reassignment to OCAS, FAS will assign you to an office within 50 miles of your home. Specific buildings or timelines cannot be guaranteed.”

VARs on the hot seat

The creation of OCAS and the focus on VARs stem from President Donald Trump’s April executive order putting GSA in charge of buying all products and services that make up the 10 areas of category management.

These efforts also coincide with the overhaul of the Federal Acquisition Regulations that GSA is leading as well as the pressure it’s putting on consulting contractors to move toward outcome-based contracts and reduce costs and reliance on non-OEM companies.

While most industry experts are generally supportive of reevaluating consulting contracts and revamping the FAR, there seems to be concern around the focus on the VAR model.

FAS Commissioner Josh Gruenbaum’s letter reiterates some of the same requests that he positioned to consultants, but also introduces the idea of spending caps.

“We are therefore requesting a detailed breakdown on all open contracts that includes OEM costs, VAR mark-ups and any additional fees for transparency. We intend to explore using this input as a scorecard to potentially establish a mark-up cap or other spend controls on OEM or vendor costs moving forward,” Gruenbaum wrote in the letter, obtained by Federal News Network. “Evaluate whether the offered pricing is appropriate given best commercial industry comparables. In addition, identify opportunities to reduce mark-ups or product costs to align with the administration’s cost cutting goals on open contracts through consolidated buys or other mechanics.”

GSA says the price mark-ups VARs charge are costing the government too much.

“Simplifying historically complex procurement processes, reviewing value-added resellers and their mark-ups, which often amount to a 5% to 7% tax on the American people for very little benefit, and making outcomes-based contracting the default will allow us to deliver on the administration’s acute focus on efficiency and waste reduction, as well as return to commonsense procurement practices,” Gruenbaum said in a statement to Federal News Network.

But experts say VARs provide a much-needed service to OEMs and systems integrators as well as the government, and generally work on a profit margin of 1% to 2%, not 5% to 7% as Gruenbaum alleged.

“People miss the reason why these VARs are very needed. They buy and sell in bulk, like Costco, but these make very thin margins. That’s why these aggregators do well because they can offer infrastructure at a reasonable price,” said Aileen Black, a former executive with Google, VMWare and other federal contractors. “Too many companies would not be able to compete in federal marketplace without VARs. Do you get bad prices because you go to Costco? The answer, of course, is no. And the government isn’t getting bad prices from VARs.”

Agencies spending with VARs has increased over the last four years to $39.1 billion, according to Deltek.

The VAR model developed over the course of the last 20 years as a growing market of vendors, especially those that provide technology, wanted access to the government — but they didn’t want to, or couldn’t, set up the infrastructure to meet extensive federal compliance requirements.

An industry executive from one of the companies who received the letter, but requested anonymity for fear of retribution, said the fact is OEMs are not set up structurally or operationally to sell directly to the government.

And even if that’s what GSA wants, it would take several months and cost tens of thousands of dollars — at least — to get them ready to do so.

“The channel has evolved over time to provide maximum value for customers and OEMs: for the customers by providing independent and objective advice, and for the OEMs by serving as an unpaid sales and marketing team that only gets paid when a deal closes,” the industry executive said. “The government is supposed to buy as much as possible using commercial best practices. OEMs in the commercial world prefer this channel. Those that want to go direct can and will go direct. But the government should not force them to hire thousands of sales engineers to do what VARs already do today for free. That will drive up cost of sales and eventually prices for the taxpayers.”

A lack of understanding?

An executive from Blue Fox Federal, an IT consulting company that works with VARs and systems integrators, said the OEMs and SIs prefer this approach because they get paid more quickly and it lowers their risk.

“Each OEM has their own program, their own criteria for volume of sales and they also require each reseller be certified to deliver said product onsite, install and integrate in a data center or wherever,” the executive said. “These VARs invest in resources, including people to do this work because the SIs and OEMs don’t want to do this. The resellers carry the bench of overhead for these resources because OEMs and SIs won’t. Resellers show up with clearances and are able to install one day and be done. That’s hard for an SI and OEMs.”

Both executives and other federal acquisition experts say GSA is lacking an understanding of the entire VAR market.

“This is not consistent with commercial item contracting. There are limits to what can be audited and the use of price analysis and competition. There is an exemption for commercial item contracting for price audits,” said one industry observer, who also requested anonymity for fear of retribution. “It’s a commercial best practice to use integrators and VARs. At end of the day, the public and private can’t afford not to.”

The observer also said commercial companies are spending billions of dollars with VARs and working through these channels and it’s unclear what GSA is trying to do with this latest effort to collect information and review efforts.

“Why are commercial companies going to want to work with the government when basically GSA is seeking all these concessions and all they appear to be offering are threats?” the observer said. “So far, they are not offering any competitive pricing incentive, and they have not yet reduced regulations or streamlined anything. If GSA thinks somehow the government is getting ripped off, why are there all kinds of competition across the system that is required? Are they even looking at these things?”

The company executive who received the letter made a similar point about competition among VARs selling the same or similar products as the best way to drive down prices. GSA’s actions actually are increasing the risk of inflating prices because the OEMs have no incentive to introduce new and innovative companies, but VARs do.

“GSA has made it clear that they see VARs as ‘pass through’ or ‘unnecessary middlemen’ or ‘drop shippers.’ They want to use them less or not at all. They also state they want to cap margin or gross profit. Looking at a sales spreadsheet alone completely ignores all the things that happen before and after the deal to earn that margin. It is not the letter per se. It is the assumptions that we are useless and the real purpose to eliminate us long-term that are most concerning,” the executive said. “What VARs do isn’t a mark up. It is a discount down. The OEM lowers the price to the VAR depending on what we did and how long and how much we did it. The taxpayers aren’t paying more. They pay the same. The margin comes from the OEM profit by them taking less, not the VAR charging the customers more.”

At the same time, few disagree that reviewing and analyzing potential opportunities to improve the process and save money isn’t necessary.

The VAR model has come under scrutiny recently. For instance, the FBI raided Carahsoft in October for reasons still unclear. But that law enforcement action left some OEMs questioning their approach to the federal market and the supply chain risks that most vendors and agencies generally glossed over until that raid.

The GSA official said the letter was step one in a much broader conversation. The official said they hope the VARs come to the table with data and details that will help shape a discussion aimed at reducing federal spending and improving efficiencies. The official added that like the consulting firms, the VARs may face some tough decisions in this new reality, including possibly lower revenue and a smaller workforce.

“There has to be a shared understanding that we all own the debt and deficit. What this administration feels like is they want to know, what is a fair markup? We do not want to put anyone out of business and fully understand the need for companies to generate revenue. But this is a point in time that we expect a certain understanding — the government needs to reduce spending and are looking for partners in industry that can align with that goal and propose realistic savings in what they charge,” the source said. “We understand VARs do help agencies with meeting socioeconomic goals and with certain complex procurements. But we are not tied to saying, ‘this is just the way we’ve always done acquisition.’ There is an outside perspective that the government has made it so hard that companies don’t want to sell to us directly and why is it so hard? We want to change that.”

The post Two more centralization, cost savings initiatives from GSA first appeared on Federal News Network.

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RFK Jr. Drops a Mega Bombshell on mRNA Vaccine Technology (VIDEO)

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This article originally appeared on vigilantfox.com and was republished with permission.

In a move that many were hoping for but were not expecting, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy just announced that BARDA will be CANCELING 22 mRNA vaccine development contracts, saving taxpayers about $500 million in the process.

This move delivered a major blow to the biomedical industrial complex, which was hoping to make an mRNA vaccine for just about every disease imaginable.


https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/foxs-video-aug-5-2025-veed-3.mp4

The reason for this move is grounded in what happened during the COVID debacle, which Kennedy explained in detail.

First, he shared how “mRNA vaccines don’t perform well against viruses that infect the upper respiratory tract.”

“mRNA only codes for a small part of the viral proteins, usually a single antigen. One mutation, and the vaccine becomes INEFFECTIVE,” Kennedy said.

The next revelation was a big surprise.

Kennedy confirmed that the COVID shots could have CAUSED the mutations and EXTENDED the pandemic altogether.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/foxs-video-aug-5-2025-veed-3.mp4

He explained:

“The [mRNA] vaccine [platform] paradoxically encourages new mutations and can actually prolong pandemics. As the virus constantly mutates to escape the protective effects of the vaccine, millions of people, maybe even you or someone you know, caught the Omicron variant despite being vaccinated. That’s because a single mutation can make mRNA vaccines ineffective.”

Kennedy’s comments echo what vaccinologist Dr. Geert Vanden Bossche and the “conspiracy theorists” have been saying for the better part of four years now.

He warned, “You are generating a breeding ground for even more infectious variants to replicate” when you vaccinate DURING a pandemic.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/video_2025-08-05_18-40-51.mp4

With the conclusion that mRNA shots are ineffective against respiratory viruses, prolong pandemics, and encourage mutations, Kennedy declared:

mRNA technology poses MORE risk than benefits for these respiratory viruses.”

As such, Kennedy announced that BARDA (Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority) will be CANCELING 22 mRNA vaccine contracts, saving taxpayers “just under $500 million” in the process.

He clarified that this isn’t a complete indictment of mRNA technology across the board, but when it comes to respiratory diseases, he believes it offers no benefit to humanity.

“That’s why we’re moving beyond the limitations of mRNA for respiratory viruses and investing in better solutions,” Kennedy said.

Thanks for reading! I hope this brought you the good news you needed today.

I was banned from Twitter 1.0 three times for sharing information that Kennedy just confirmed.

Like many others, I was labeled a “conspiracy theorist.” Turns out, we were right all along.

File:TinFoilHat002.jpg - Wikimedia CommonsImage: Wikipedia Commons

Find more stories like this at VigilantFox.com

The post RFK Jr. Drops a Mega Bombshell on mRNA Vaccine Technology (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene Unloads on the GOP, H1B Immigration, Foreign Aid to Ukraine, Israel

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Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has publicly criticized President Donald Trump over immigration policy and foreign aid.

Greene responded to Trump’s tariff announcement on India by urging an end to H1-B visas that she claims replace American jobs. Greene also called for stopping funding and weapons to Ukraine in its conflict with Russia.

Greene stated that continued U.S. funding for Kiev betrays the majority of Americans who voted to end foreign wars.

She highlighted Trump’s 2024 election win as a mandate against such involvement. The congresswoman warned that supporting these policies risks losing younger voters permanently.

On the Israel-Gaza conflict, Greene described Israel’s actions as a “genocide” and condemned the starvation in Gaza. She became the first Republican lawmaker to use this term publicly.

Greene emphasized that innocent Palestinian lives, including children and Christians, should not be devalued compared to Israeli ones.

Greene expressed surprise that more conservative colleagues have not spoken out against U.S. support for Israel’s offensive operations.

She argued that funding such wars contradicts a biblical mandate and America’s interests.

The congresswoman clarified her support for Israel’s existence while opposing involvement in its conflicts.

Trump has acknowledged the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, noting visible starvation among children despite Netanyahu’s denials.

He mentioned his wife Melania’s distress over images from the region. This marks a softening in Trump’s stance amid ongoing hostilities nearing two years.

Greene’s positions reflect broader shifts in U.S. opinion, with approval of Israel’s Gaza actions dropping to 32 percent per Gallup polls.

Republicans under 50 now view Israel more negatively than positively, according to Pew surveys.

Figures like Steve Bannon and Tucker Carlson have also criticized Netanyahu’s government.

The congresswoman has voiced growing frustration with the Republican Party’s direction. She questioned whether the GOP is leaving her or if she no longer relates to it.

Greene stated she does not want involvement in the party’s current course on foreign policy and spending.

3Greene warned Trump about delivering on promises like Epstein file transparency to retain base support. She referenced past divergences, including on AI policy in Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill.” Despite these splits, Greene affirmed her commitment to America First principles.

Greene suggested her political future may not rely on party establishment backing. She expressed confidence in winning support from Georgia voters independently. However, the congresswoman indicated no plans for higher office in 2026.

The post Marjorie Taylor Greene Unloads on the GOP, H1B Immigration, Foreign Aid to Ukraine, Israel appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott Files Emergency Petition with Supreme Court to REMOVE Democrat Ringleader Who Fled State to Obstruct Redistricting Vote

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State Rep. Gene Wu

Governor Greg Abbott has officially filed an emergency writ of quo warranto with the Texas Supreme Court, seeking the removal of far-left Democrat State Representative Gene Wu from office for abandoning his constitutional duties and fleeing the state in a premeditated scheme to block a GOP-led vote.

According to the explosive 70-page filing, Rep. Wu—Chair of the Texas House Democratic Caucus—was the ringleader of a carefully orchestrated plan that saw dozens of Democrat lawmakers hop aboard a 76-seat private jet, funded in part by Beto O’Rourke’s political action committee, to escape to Chicago rather than perform their duty during a constitutionally mandated special legislative session.

The petition alleges that Wu and his fellow Democrats deliberately broke quorum to sabotage redistricting reforms and kill flood relief, property tax relief, and school reform legislation, critical priorities for Texans.

“If representatives are free not to show up whenever they choose, then Texans simply do not have a representative government,” the petition reads.

“In fact, they don’t have a functioning government at all. This Court should make clear that a legislator who does not wish to perform his duties will be stripped of them.”

The petition reveals that Wu not only left the state, but actively solicited donations online to help cover fines and expenses—funding his absence with cash from liberal donors.

The document accuses him of potentially violating Texas bribery laws and the state constitution, citing provisions that require forfeiture of office if an official accepts anything of value to withhold their vote.

Wu posted pictures boarding the jet on X, while simultaneously asking followers to “Support Texas House Democrats as we deny quorum.” One image was immediately followed by a donation link.

According to the petition, Beto O’Rourke’s PAC offered to cover the cost of the trip and committed all future donations to lawmakers who fled the state.

The petition concludes:

This case is not a political dispute; it is a constitutional crisis. The current Special Session is set to expire in just two weeks. But Wu apparently has no intention of returning. Instead, he claims the “special session is over.” Permitting him to continue occupying his office so that he can abdicate the duties of that office will only enable future legislators to grind state government to a halt.

Perhaps these absent members expect—someday—to return to Texas and be hailed as heroes who “fought” by fleeing. But in the meantime, they are preventing the Texas Legislature, duly called by the Governor, from addressing the acute needs of Texans across the State.

Every day, their continued absence wastes taxpayer dollars and imperils urgent policy needs, ranging from improved flood response tools to the judicial omnibus bill governing the day-to-day workings of the state courts.

And, in the future, whenever the Governor adds an item on the special session agenda that they find offensive, they may feel empowered to once again flee the State and deny the Article III, Section 5 constitutional mandate. Absent quo warranto, there is no end in sight to this piracy.

The Constitution nowhere envisions Texans signing onto that kind of suicide pact. Legislators may, of course, disagree on specific pieces of legislation.

But our Constitution conceives of deliberation and debate as the official way to process official disagreements. That is why, in addition to laying out general principles for the order of business, the Constitution imposes mandatory duties on members to ensure they will be present to conduct business.

Representative government cannot function if elected officials may monetize their absence, abandon their obligations, and paralyze the Legislature without consequence.

The writ of quo warranto exists precisely to remedy such abuses. And there is still time for this Court to use it here. Ordering Wu’s removal from office would ensure that public office remains a trust exercised in good faith, as opposed to a platform for private gain and governmental sabotage.

It could also begin to make it easier to establish a quorum while the Special Session is still under way. Above all, however, it promises to restrain future abuses. Refusing to address the problem now may simply invite it to recur, always in the final days of a session.

The integrity of Texas’s constitutional order demands this Court’s urgent intervention, and Texas voters are counting on it.

The post Texas Gov. Greg Abbott Files Emergency Petition with Supreme Court to REMOVE Democrat Ringleader Who Fled State to Obstruct Redistricting Vote appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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