White house
memo
Trump and
Musk’s Relationship Melts Down in Spectacular Fashion
The speed of
the fallout was breathtaking, with President Trump celebrating Elon Musk during
an Oval Office farewell just last Friday.
Shawn
McCreesh
By Shawn
McCreesh
Reporting
from Washington
Published
June 5, 2025
Updated June
6, 2025, 12:45 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/05/us/politics/trump-elon-musk-fight.html
The moment
had finally come, and it was every bit as lowdown, vindictive, personal, petty,
operatic, childish, consequential, messy and public as many had always expected
it would be.
“One thing’s for sure,” Elon Musk
posted on X midway through his relentless hourslong attack on Donald Trump, “it
ain’t boring!”
The clash of
the titans was upon us, and the gloves were off.
The speed of
the fallout was breathtaking. Up until about 14 seconds ago, Mr. Musk was
flying on Mr. Trump’s planes, staying at his homes, socializing with his
children. On Friday, Mr. Trump celebrated him with an Oval Office farewell
address and gave him a novelty, oversize key to the White House.
But all was
not well. Mr. Musk had been stewing about the sweeping domestic policy bill
that the White House was pushing through Congress. By Thursday afternoon, he
started spitting venom.
“Without me, Trump would have lost the
election,” Mr. Musk wrote on X. “Such ingratitude.”
How sharper
than a serpent’s tooth it is!
Usually,
when Mr. Trump has a big, messy falling-out in public, it is with someone who
needs him, a lesser being who lives in fear of a primary challenge or somehow
being ruined. But now he was beefing with the rare person who has leverage over
him — political and financial leverage and perhaps even some emotional
leverage. When Mr. Trump said on Thursday that he was “very disappointed in
Elon,” he sounded as if he meant it.
But Mr.
Trump, being the president of the United States, had some leverage of his own.
He mused on
Truth Social that the “easiest way to save money in our Budget” would be to
wipe out Mr. Musk’s government subsidies and contracts. “I was always surprised
that Biden didn’t do it!” Mr. Trump added, causing Mr. Musk to erupt further.
There was a
screwball element to their back-and-forth: Because Mr. Trump and Mr. Musk are
each the masters of their own social media platform, neither one was directly
replying to the other. Anyone following along at home (which is to say,
everyone) had to toggle between platforms to keep up with these keyboard
cowboys as they aimed shots at each other.
“THE GIRLS ARE FIGHTING” was a top
trending topic on Mr. Musk’s platform Thursday. There was a schoolyard aspect
to their scrap as many on the playground rushed to jump in. “SPICY,” Laura
Loomer posted. “hey @realDonaldTrump lmk if u need any breakup advice,” posted
Ashley St. Clair, the mother of one of Mr. Musk’s children. Mr. Musk began to
hit the “unfollow” button on accounts belonging to close Trump allies such as
Charlie Kirk and Stephen Miller.
Four hours
into the shootout, a peacekeeper emerged in the form of Kanye West. “Broooos
please noooooo,” he posted on X with an emoji of two people hugging. “We love
you both so much.”
But they
seemed far beyond the point of hugging it out. A line had been crossed that
probably could never be uncrossed. “Time to drop the really big bomb,” Mr. Musk
wrote shortly after 3 p.m., “@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is
the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT!” The
implication that Mr. Trump is somehow connected to Mr. Epstein’s crimes was an
especially explosive one to make, given that large swaths of Mr. Trump’s base
remain so animated by the sordid details of that particular case.
“Some food for thought,” Mr. Musk
wrote in another especially cutting post. “Trump has 3.5 years left as
President, but I will be around for 40+ years.”
Questions
swirled above the fray: Just how hard might Mr. Trump, who has been shown to
have no qualms about weaponizing government, actually go after Mr. Musk? Are
Tesla and SpaceX about to get DOGE’d?
What would
happen to that red Tesla that Mr. Musk parked at the White House, the one that
Mr. Trump’s young aides love to drive around and post pictures from?
And would
Mr. Musk have to send back his key to the White House?
Shawn
McCreesh is a White House reporter for The Times covering the Trump
administration.
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