Buildup
to a Meltdown: How the Trump-Musk Alliance Collapsed
President
Trump’s decision to pull a close associate of Elon Musk’s out of the running to
lead NASA helped doom an extraordinary partnership.
Tyler Pager Maggie
Haberman Jonathan Swan Theodore Schleifer Ryan Mac
By Tyler
Pager Maggie Haberman Jonathan Swan Theodore Schleifer and Ryan Mac
Tyler Pager,
Jonathan Swan and Theodore Schleifer reported from Washington. Maggie Haberman
reported from New York, and Ryan Mac from Los Angeles.
June 6, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/06/us/politics/trump-musk-split-nasa.html
President
Trump was peeved.
Just minutes
before he walked into the Oval Office for a televised send-off for Elon Musk
last week, an aide had handed him a file.
The papers
showed that Mr. Trump’s nominee to run NASA — a close associate of Mr. Musk’s —
had donated to prominent Democrats in recent years, including some who Mr.
Trump was learning about for the first time.
The
president set his outrage aside and mustered through a cordial public farewell.
But as soon as the cameras left the Oval Office, the president confronted Mr.
Musk. He started to read some of the donations out loud, shaking his head.
This was not
good, the president said.
Mr. Musk,
who was sporting a black eye that he blamed on a punch from his young son,
tried to explain. He said Jared Isaacman, a billionaire entrepreneur who was
set to become the next NASA administrator, cared about getting things done.
Yes, he had donated to Democrats, but so had a lot of people.
Maybe it’s a
good thing, Mr. Musk told the president — it shows that you’re willing to hire
people of all stripes.
But Mr.
Trump was unmoved. He said that people don’t change. These are the types of
people who will turn, he said, and it won’t end up being good for us.
The moment
of pique was a signal of the simmering tensions between the two men that would
explode into the open less than a week later, upending what had been one of the
most extraordinary alliances in American politics.
This account
of the crumbling ties between the president and Mr. Musk is based on interviews
with 13 people with direct knowledge of the events, all of whom asked for
anonymity to describe private discussions.
While the
relationship had been losing steam over the past several months as Mr. Musk
clashed with Trump officials, people close to both men said the disagreement
over Mr. Isaacman accelerated the breakup.
Mr. Musk had
been planning to exit the White House relatively quietly — before Mr.
Isaacman’s ouster left him feeling humiliated.
Now the two
men, who seemed inseparable at one point, are on opposite sides. Mr. Musk
suggested Mr. Trump should be impeached. Mr. Trump has threatened to cancel
government contracts with Mr. Musk’s companies.
Mr. Trump,
who was briefed on a New York Times article about Mr. Musk’s drug use, told
associates that Mr. Musk’s “crazy” behavior was linked to his drug use,
according to two people with knowledge of the president’s private
conversations.
A Tanked
Nomination
For Mr.
Musk, there were few positions across the thousands in the federal government
that mattered more to him than the head of NASA, because of its critical
importance to SpaceX, his rocket business. So it was of great personal benefit
to Mr. Musk when Mr. Trump chose Mr. Isaacman, who has flown to space twice
with SpaceX, to oversee the agency.
Mr.
Isaacman’s donations to Democrats had not always been a problem.
While Mr.
Trump privately told advisers that he was surprised to learn of them, he and
his team had been briefed about them during the presidential transition, before
Mr. Isaacman’s nomination, according to two people with knowledge of the
events. But by last Friday, when Mr. Trump went through the file containing
details of the donations, he clearly had changed his mind.
Mr. Musk
barely mounted a defense of his friend. He was anxious about doing so with
other people around, including Sergio Gor, the director of the presidential
personnel office, who had clashed with Mr. Musk over other staffing matters.
Mr. Musk believed that he would be able to talk to the president at some point
after the gathering, privately.
But Mr. Musk
never got a chance to make his case.
In the hours
after the Oval Office farewell, Mr. Trump decided he would withdraw Mr.
Isaacman from consideration. Mr. Musk was stunned by how fast it all
happened.
Mr. Musk’s
allies have argued privately that Mr. Isaacman’s recent donations to Democrats
were nonideological and made at the encouragement of Senator Mark Kelly,
Democrat of Arizona and a former astronaut. A spokesman for Mr. Kelly declined
to comment.
As Mr. Musk
dealt with the fallout from the tanked nomination, he spent part of the weekend
outside of Missoula, Mont., as a guest at “Symposium,” an event for tech
executives, investors and startup founders thrown by Founders Fund, the venture
capital firm founded by Peter Thiel.
He mingled
with guests at Paws Up, a high-end resort with glamping tents and luxury cabins
set on 37,000 acres of a historic cattle ranch. There, he had a wide-ranging
conversation with Mr. Thiel, who could sense no coming feud with the president,
according to a person familiar with the talks.
Sam Altman,
the chief executive of OpenAI who has been openly feuding with Mr. Musk, was
also in attendance, though the two men did not speak.
For Mr.
Musk, the goings-on in Washington were still top of mind.
After
spending a day in Montana, he turned his attention in earnest to assailing the
top domestic priority of Mr. Trump: the Republican bill making its way through
Congress that would slash taxes and steer more money to the military and
immigration enforcement.
Privately
and publicly, Mr. Musk stewed over the bill, believing that its spending would
erase the supposed savings of his Department of Government Efficiency and add
to the federal deficit.
Some
Republican lawmakers had tried to assuage Mr. Musk’s fears. On Monday, Speaker
Mike Johnson walked the billionaire through the bill and said that Congress
would try to codify the work done by DOGE. After the call, Mr. Johnson told
associates that he felt Mr. Musk was uninformed about the legislation and the
Congressional process, but that he had been able to reason with the world’s
richest man, according to a person familiar with the conversation.
On Monday
evening, Mr. Musk still had concerns. He hinted at them on X, reposting a chart
apparently showing the yearly increase in the national debt.
“Scary,” Mr.
Musk wrote as a caption.
Mr. Trump
did not respond to Mr. Musk’s criticisms of the bill and maintained a light
public schedule.
Meltdown
The
Trump-Musk alliance fully ruptured on Thursday, six days after the two men put
on a collegial display in the Oval Office.
Mr. Musk,
who had largely focused his attacks on Republicans in Congress, had started
directing more ire at the president himself.
So when Mr.
Trump was asked about Mr. Musk’s comments during a meeting with Friedrich Merz,
the new German chancellor, the president finally let loose. He said he was
“disappointed” in Mr. Musk, downplayed the billionaire’s financial support for
his presidential campaign and posited that Mr. Musk developed “Trump
derangement syndrome” after leaving the White House.
Mr. Musk
fired back in real time. Using X, his social media platform, he unleashed a
torrent of attacks. He claimed there were references to the president in
government documents about Jeffrey Epstein, the sex offender, and indicated his
support for the president’s impeachment. He also said Mr. Trump’s tariffs would
cause a recession by the end of the year.
Later, Mr.
Trump, using his own social media platform, threatened to cut the billions of
dollars in federal contracts with Mr. Musk’s companies.
By Thursday
evening, Mr. Musk signaled he would be open to de-escalating the fight, while
the president seemed to have little interest in an immediate reconciliation.
White House officials said Mr. Trump had no plans to call Mr. Musk.
“President
Trump is the unequivocal leader of the Republican Party, and the vast majority
of the country approves of his job performance as president,” Karoline Leavitt,
the White House press secretary, said in a statement. “Inflation is down,
consumer confidence and wages are up, the jobs report beat expectations for the
third month in a row, the border is secure and America is hotter than ever
before.”
A
spokeswoman for Mr. Musk did not respond to a request for comment.
Mr. Musk,
his allies and even some White House officials now pin the blame on Mr. Gor,
believing he sabotaged Mr. Isaacman as Mr. Musk was on his way out. But some
close Trump allies say Mr. Gor was being unfairly criticized for a decision
that ultimately rests with the president.
Mr. Gor and
Mr. Musk had clashed several times early in Mr. Trump’s second term, including
at two cabinet meetings, where Mr. Musk questioned how swiftly Mr. Gor was
moving to fill the top ranks of agencies. Mr. Musk’s and Mr. Gor’s teams often
disagreed over personnel and the amount of power that should be given to aides
at the Department of Government Efficiency.
But Mr.
Gor’s title — director of the White House Presidential Personnel Office — does
not convey the scope of his influence in the president’s orbit. Mr. Gor founded
a pro-Trump super PAC during the 2024 presidential election, and co-founded a
publishing house with Donald Trump Jr. that has published books by the
president and his allies.
The
president’s aides and allies quickly jumped to Mr. Gor’s defense on Friday.
“Sergio Gor
is a vital member of the team, and he has helped President Trump put together
an administration that is second to none,” Steven Cheung, the White House
communications director, said in a statement. As for Mr. Musk?
White House
officials said Friday that Mr. Trump was considering selling the bright red
Tesla he got in March as a show of support for Mr. Musk.
Cade Metz
and Michael Gold contributed reporting.
Tyler Pager
is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his
administration.
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.
Jonathan
Swan is a White House reporter for The Times, covering the administration of
Donald J. Trump. Contact him securely on Signal: @jonathan.941
Theodore
Schleifer is a Times reporter covering billionaires and their impact on the
world.
Ryan Mac
covers corporate accountability across the global technology industry.


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