Trump and
Musk’s Unlikely Alliance Breaks Down in Rapid and Public Fashion
The sudden
fallout ended a nearly yearlong partnership, during which Mr. Musk helped
propel Mr. Trump to the White House and became one of the president’s top
advisers.
Tyler
PagerTheodore Schleifer
By Tyler
Pager and Theodore Schleifer
Reporting
from Washington
June 5, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/05/us/politics/trump-musk-policy-bill.html
It was
always the most unlikely of alliances.
Last year,
two mercurial billionaires formed a partnership and vowed to drive the country
in a new direction. Donald Trump had the political power. Elon Musk had the
money and social media might.
But on
Thursday, their union dissolved in remarkably public and rapid fashion, with
the two men attacking each other over matters both significant and petty.
Beyond the
immediate drama, the breakup of the president and the world’s richest man
upended one of the most powerful dynamics shaping Mr. Trump’s second term.
Their
dispute began days ago over the president’s signature domestic policy bill,
which Mr. Musk had panned as a “disgusting abomination.” But it escalated
uncontrollably on Thursday into a fight over who deserved more credit for Mr.
Trump’s election victory, why Mr. Musk had not covered up his black eye with
makeup during an Oval Office appearance last week and why Mr. Trump had
abruptly dropped his support for a Musk associate nominated to lead NASA.
The sparring
swiftly devolved into threats on their respective social media platforms, as
Mr. Trump threatened to cut the billions in dollars in federal government
contracts with Mr. Musk’s companies. For his part, Mr. Musk unleashed a tirade
of attacks on the man he had once lavishly praised. He suggested it might be
time to create a new political party, claimed there were references to Mr.
Trump in government documents about the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein and indicated his support for a post calling for the president’s
impeachment.
The public
jousting became so ugly that at one point, Ashley St. Clair, a right-leaning
writer who has a child with Mr. Musk but is estranged from him, jumped in. “Hey
@realDonaldTrump lmk if u need any breakup advice,” she wrote on X.
Their sudden
fallout ended a nearly yearlong partnership, during which Mr. Musk helped
propel Mr. Trump to the White House and became one of the president’s top
advisers, steering an effort to drastically cut government staffing and
contracts that sent shock waves through the federal bureaucracy.
Both men now
have a lot at risk. Mr. Musk, who spent about $275 million helping elect Mr.
Trump in 2024, had promised to give $100 million to groups controlled by the
president’s team before the 2026 midterms — funds that have yet to be delivered
and are now very much in doubt. Mr. Trump not only must confront the
choking-off of election support; he now must contend with the wrath of an
ally-turned-foe who appears determined to undermine his standing on the right.
Mr. Musk’s
companies have benefited from billions of dollars in government contracts and
were positioned to receive billions more, a lucrative revenue source for his
business empire that Mr. Trump is now threatening.
Mr. Trump’s
political advisers are preparing for a possible drawn-out war against Mr. Musk
in which allies of both men in tech and politics are forced to choose sides,
according to one person close to the president who spoke on the condition of
anonymity to describe internal conversations.
“This is an
unfortunate episode from Elon, who is unhappy with the One Big Beautiful Bill
because it does not include the policies he wanted,” Karoline Leavitt, the
White House press secretary, said in a statement. “The president is focused on
passing this historic piece of legislation and making our country great again.”
But by
Thursday night, Mr. Musk appeared to be trying to de-escalate. When Bill
Ackman, the hedge-fund billionaire, posted on social media that Mr. Musk and
Mr. Trump “should make peace for the benefit of our great country,” Mr. Musk
responded, “You’re not wrong.”
For their
part, Mr. Musk’s friends and associates said they were in a state of disbelief
over the acrimonious and abrupt break, and spent Thursday glued to their
computers and phones as they watched their friend joust with Mr. Trump, unsure
of his plan.
Some in Mr.
Musk’s orbit professed confidence that the tech executive would outlast Mr.
Trump in global influence. But there was still nervousness in Mr. Musk’s circle
that he had picked an enormous fight, even by his standards, that could
backfire on him and the world of the “tech right,” the ecosystem of Silicon
Valley executives who have embraced the Trump administration.
Few of Mr.
Musk’s associates had expected the relationship to last forever. But they said
they were sad that it had come to such a bitter end.
In the early
months of the administration, Mr. Musk had been a constant presence at Mr.
Trump’s side, traveling with him to Mar-a-Lago on the weekends and sitting for
a joint interview on Fox News while overseeing a government-wide effort to cut
federal spending.
But his work
with the Department of Government Efficiency led to clashes with top cabinet
officials, who sparred with Mr. Musk about his cuts and tactics. Mr. Trump
largely stood by Mr. Musk, although their relationship started to fray as
complaints increased about Mr. Musk’s approach, according to people familiar
with the dynamics.
For days,
Mr. Trump appeared hesitant to feud with Mr. Musk, even as the tech mogul
assailed the president’s signature legislation as a measure that would increase
the deficit, lambasting it as “massive, outrageous, pork-filled.”
But Mr. Musk
would not let up. He argued that the measure would undo all the work he did to
cut government spending and hinted that he would target Republicans who backed
the legislation in next year’s midterm elections.
On Thursday,
when asked by reporters about Mr. Musk’s criticism, Mr. Trump fought back.
“I’m very
disappointed in Elon,” Mr. Trump said in the Oval Office during a visit with
Friedrich Merz, Germany’s new chancellor. “I’ve helped Elon a lot.”
He became a
little bit different. And I can understand that. But he knew every aspect of
this bill. He knew it better than almost anybody, and he never had a problem
until right after he left. And if you saw the statements he made about me —
which I’m sure you can get very easily, it’s very fresh on tape — he said the
most beautiful things about me. And he hasn’t said bad about me personally, but
I’m sure that’ll be next. But I’m very disappointed in Elon. I’ve helped Elon a
lot.
But he knew
every
aspect of
this bill.
He also
downplayed his former ally’s financial support during the campaign, arguing
that he would have won Pennsylvania without Mr. Musk, who poured much of his
money and time into the critical battleground state.
Mr. Musk
returned fire.
“Without me,
Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the
Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate,” Mr. Musk wrote on X.
“Such
ingratitude,” he replied a moment later, taking credit for Mr. Trump’s election
in a way that he never had.
The attacks
between the two men continued on their respective social media platforms.
“The easiest
way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to
terminate Elon’s Governmental Subsidies and Contracts,” Mr. Trump wrote on
Truth Social. “I was always surprised that Biden didn’t do it!”
In response,
Mr. Musk said SpaceX, his space technology company, would begin decommissioning
its Dragon spacecraft, though he later appeared to back down from that threat.
NASA relies on the spacecraft to carry astronauts, food and other supplies to
the International Space Station.
As he
stepped away from his government work in recent weeks, Mr. Musk appeared to be
in good spirits, telling friends that he wanted to stay active in some parts of
his cost-cutting operation, including blocking funding for programs that he
believed promoted illegal immigration, according to a person familiar with the
conversations who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe private
conversations.
But he
discarded whatever caution he had on Thursday, ridiculing the president in a
pattern familiar to the many previous Trump advisers who have fallen by the
wayside.
By the
afternoon, Mr. Musk floated leaving the Republican Party to form a new party,
and openly speculated that Mr. Trump, who once opposed raising the deficit, had
been replaced by a “body double.”
When their
fighting broke out Thursday around noon, the stock of Tesla fell by 14 percent.
The stock of Truth Social’s parent company, Trump Media & Technology Group,
slid by 8 percent.
Just last
week, Mr. Trump had given Mr. Musk a personal send-off in the Oval Office. He
praised Mr. Musk as “one of the greatest business leaders and innovators the
world has ever produced,” and handed him a golden key emblazoned with the White
House insignia. Mr. Musk promised to remain a “friend and adviser to the
president.”
During that
event, Mr. Musk sported a black eye, which he attributed to his young son
punching him in the face. Mr. Trump on Thursday made fun of Mr. Musk’s
unwillingness to wear makeup to cover up the bruise. He also suggested that the
tech executive, like other former aides, was suffering from “Trump derangement
syndrome” now that he had left the inner circle of the White House.
“They wake
up in the morning, the glamour is gone, the whole world is different and they
become hostile,” the president said.
Mr. Musk
shot back, saying Mr. Trump’s tariffs would cause a recession by the end of the
year and sharing old social media posts from Mr. Trump criticizing Republicans
for not addressing the growing deficit.
Mr. Trump
said Mr. Musk’s criticism of his domestic policy bill was self-interested, and
that he only opposed the legislation after Republicans took out electric
vehicle subsidies that would benefit Tesla, Mr. Musk’s company. (Mr. Musk had
previously called for an end to those tax credits.)
“Elon was
‘wearing thin,’ I asked him to leave, I took away his EV Mandate that forced
everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months
I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY,” Mr. Trump wrote on Truth Social.
Mr. Musk,
writing on X, responded: “Such an obvious lie. So sad.”
Reporting
was contributed by Kate Conger, Maggie Haberman, Ryan Mac, Michael C. Bender
and Kenneth Chang.
Tyler Pager
is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his
administration.
Theodore
Schleifer is a Times reporter covering billionaires and their impact on the
world.
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