OPINION
DAVID
FRENCH
Why Elon Musk Is the Second Most Important Person
in MAGA
March 3,
2024
David
French
By David
French
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/03/opinion/musk-x-maga-trump.html
One of the
most remarkable developments of the new century has been the concentration of
right-wing power and adulation in two men. Donald Trump is the obvious one, the
unquestioned king of the American right. But easier to miss if you’re outside
the MAGA world is the central importance of Elon Musk.
We’re
familiar with Trump’s arc, of course. But why is Musk so important to the
right? Why is a reported illicit drug user and unmarried father of 11 children
by three women, a man whose social media site, X, is overrun with hatred and
pornography, celebrated across the length and breadth of the new right,
including parts of the Christian right?
The answer
is that if Trump is MAGA’s champion, Musk is its gatekeeper. He doesn’t just
use his immense reach (he has 174 million followers on X) to fight the left; he
owns the right wing’s public square. This is because outside of X, the public
isn’t reading the right. And as a result, X now shapes the right as much as
even Fox News.
On Feb. 22,
a website called The Righting released an analysis using Comscore data to
compare web traffic at top right-wing sites from January 2020 to January 2024.
The findings are surprising: Right-wing media appears to be struggling even
more than mainstream media. Of the top right-wing sites in 2020, only Newsmax
gained audience over the past four years. Every other right-wing site lost
visitors, and most lost a staggering percentage of them.
For
example, The Righting reports that The Washington Examiner lost 66 percent of
its visitors. The Washington Times lost 82 percent. Breitbart lost 87 percent
and The Daily Wire 73 percent. Aside from Newsmax and Fox News (which lost only
24 percent of its visitors), every other right-wing site has lost at least half
its visitors in four years. Some have lost so many that The Righting could no
longer measure their reader numbers.
In fact,
the loss is so profound that there are individual articles and columns in The
New York Times that get more visitors than all of the content that many of
these sites post for an entire month. As a practical matter, this means that
social media — and principally Musk’s X — becomes the central way in which many
right-wing figures reach the public.
There are
several consequences of this reality. It’s altering the way the right speaks.
People will be naturally prone to focus most of their efforts on the medium
through which they interact with the most people. A vast majority of people who
interact with my work, for example, do so by reading my pieces, not by viewing
my social media posts. My written work is the central focus of my professional
life, while my social media posts are essentially an afterthought.
But what if
that balance is reversed? It bends a person (or a movement) around the
attitudes of social media and away from the kinds of arguments that require the
length of a column or essay. Social media creates not a marketplace of ideas so
much as a gallery of takes, where you can spend hours doomscrolling through
short videos and snappy retorts.
That’s how
a movement transfers its allegiance from the ideas of a man like William F.
Buckley Jr. to an X influencer like @Catturd2 and his 2.4 million followers.
It’s one reason a person like Tucker Carlson devolves from an interesting,
idiosyncratic writer and thinker to an online shock jock and outrage merchant.
This
transformation has the effect of further radicalizing the right. There’s a “Can
you top this?” dynamic to posting that pushes people to extremes. In the
offline world, paranoia is a liability. It inhibits you from seeing the world
clearly. In parts of the online world, you’re considered a rube if you’re not
paranoid, if you’re not seeing a leftist plot around every corner, if you’re
not believing that Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s romance is a Biden
administration psy-op that culminated with rigging the Super Bowl.
Moreover, a
social media-centered movement understands what to think — the marching orders,
however incoherent, typically trickle down from Trump — but often breaks down
on the why. To take one vivid example, last month the Washington Post
journalist Taylor Lorenz interviewed the founder of the popular X account Libs
of TikTok, a woman named Chaya Raichik. Libs of TikTok is one of the most
influential accounts in red America. Her posts don’t just trigger public
outrage (and sometimes spawn an avalanche of threats against her targets); they
directly affect legislation. Yet the interview is agonizing to watch. Time and
again, Raichik proves unable or unwilling to articulate the basis for her
beliefs. Her attitude is clear. Her ideas are not.
Finally,
this dependence on social media is shaping the right’s position on free speech.
As the platforms they created lose traffic, it becomes even more important that
right-wing figures secure their place on the platforms they did not create.
Thus, the same Republican Party that circled its wagons to protect corporate
speech and the corporate exercise of religion in Supreme Court cases involving
Citizens United, Hobby Lobby and 303 Creative has now passed laws in Florida
and Texas trying to dictate private companies’ moderation policies.
To be
clear: The dynamics of social media are corrosive to both right and left, and
it’s not just right-wing sites that are losing readers. (The Righting also
reported that CNN had lost 20 percent of its visitors, for example.) Left-wing
activists on social media can be just as conspiratorial and vengeful as the
worst actors on the right. But there’s been a substantial divergence. Whereas
pre-Musk Twitter was once a center of the left-leaning journalistic and
activist universes, they have substantially abandoned the site as a sideshow.
For the right, meanwhile, Musk’s X has become the main stage.
It’s hard
to think of a worse pair of human beings to shape the character of a movement
than Donald Trump and Elon Musk. Yet here we are, with Trump controlling the
right’s access to power, and Musk increasingly controlling the right’s access
to the public. At best, those on the right who wish to maintain that access
must cynically ignore, rationalize and minimize the two men’s profound flaws.
At worst, it means actively embracing their values to curry favor. Like Trump’s
ugly, erratic politics, Musk’s website is substantially contributing to the
devolution of thinking on the right. The ideas are in retreat. It’s the
attitude that matters now.
David
French is an Opinion columnist, writing about law, culture, religion and armed
conflict. He is a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom and a former
constitutional litigator. His most recent book is “Divided We Fall: America’s
Secession Threat and How to Restore Our Nation.” You can
follow him on Threads (@davidfrenchjag).


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