Trump Has
Power, a Big Megaphone and Billions to Spend. So Does Musk.
President
Trump is locked in a showdown with the world’s richest man, who is far from a
typical opponent.
Luke
Broadwater
By Luke
Broadwater
Reporting
from Washington
June 6, 2025
Updated
12:47 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/06/us/politics/trump-musk.html
Since taking
office in January, President Trump has faced almost no meaningful opposition.
Congress has
been acquiescent and conspicuously uninterested in oversight. He has bulldozed
past the courts to impose his will on immigration policy and exact retribution
on law firms and universities. Conservative media outlets have backed him and
his agenda, and some mainstream news organizations have been cowed.
But now Mr.
Trump is not just confronting a powerful foe for the first time this year — he
is going toe-to-toe with an angry rival in Elon Musk, who has the capacity to
sustain a fight and shares the president’s go-for-jugular instincts and
willingness to scorch the earth to achieve even short-term advantage.
It is a new
challenge for Mr. Trump, who has always had a knack for cowing and humiliating
rivals and using social media and the soft and hard powers of the presidency to
steamroll any opposition.
Mr. Musk,
who owns X and has 220 million followers, can match or arguably exceed Mr.
Trump’s volume on social media, given the limited reach of Truth Social, the
president’s own platform.
Mr. Trump
may be a billionaire, but Mr. Musk is the world’s wealthiest man and among its
most successful entrepreneurs and technology visionaries.
If it were a
matchup of schoolyard bullies or cinematic monsters, it would be a real fight.
“It really
is like Godzilla versus Kong,” said Costas Panagopoulos, a professor of
political science at Northeastern University.
But for all
the irresistible allure of watching two of the world’s most powerful men savage
each other, there is much substance at stake.
Their battle
comes at a moment when Mr. Trump is engaged in a delicate dance on Capitol Hill
to get his signature legislation, the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill, passed
through Congress. At the same time, he is trying to negotiate the end to
foreign conflicts that are proving much more intractable than he predicted.
It is not
clear how long their feud will continue, at least at the level of intensity on
display on Thursday. And Mr. Musk, the owner of SpaceX and Tesla, has much to
lose from a protracted fight against Mr. Trump, whose hold over the Republican
Party has been unshakable and whose powers to harm Mr. Musk’s interests are
extensive.
But their
rift has for the first time brought into the open vulnerabilities for Mr. Trump
that had largely been papered over.
The
president’s big-spending habits have long rankled a small group of
libertarian-minded lawmakers who often raise concerns about the growing
national debt but are frequently pressured into submission. Now, with Mr. Musk
taking up their cause, they have added firepower, further endangering the
passage of the legislation carrying Mr. Trump’s domestic agenda, which includes
billions in tax cuts, funding for the border wall and restrictions on Medicaid
— but also a hike in the debt ceiling.
The
Trump-Musk feud could also serve as a major distraction as the administration
tries to carry out tricky negotiations across the world on matters of trade,
war and peace, including with Russia, Iran and China. Mr. Musk suggested on
Thursday that Mr. Trump’s tariff strategy could drive the United States into
recession later this year, surfacing a concern that some economists share.
There is
also the matter of Mr. Musk’s substantive work in aerospace through his company
SpaceX, which the federal government heavily relies on. After Mr. Musk attacked
the president, Mr. Trump threatened to pull his contracts. The billionaire
businessman said he would begin decommissioning a capsule used to take
astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station. (Mr. Musk then said
he would not follow through with the threat.)
Todd Belt,
the director of the political management program at George Washington
University, predicted that if the two men did not patch up their differences,
they could end up backing different candidates in Republicans primaries in
2026.
“Elon Musk
is a person who likes to take risks, and his businesses are so deeply invested
in government, you can’t see him really getting out of politics,” Mr. Belt
said. “So I think ultimately, what we might really see is Musk primary
candidates and Trump primary candidates in 2026.”
Mr. Trump
rose in politics in part because of his knack for sizing up his target’s
weaknesses, and then relentlessly mocking them. His one-liners, like
“Low-Energy Jeb” Bush and “Little Marco” Rubio, helped end rival campaigns and
either drive his opponents out of politics altogether or convince them to bend
the knee.
But now in
Mr. Musk, he has met an opponent with social media prowess and a propensity to
punch below the belt.
Throughout
the day on Thursday, the two men traded blows on their respective social media
platforms: Mr. Trump disparaging Mr. Musk on his Truth Social site, suggesting
his opposition to the legislation was motivated by greed and a desire for
electric vehicle subsidies for Tesla; and Mr. Musk bad-mouthing the president
on his much larger site, X, formerly known as Twitter.
Although Mr.
Trump’s feud with Mr. Musk began as a policy dispute, it was Mr. Musk who
quickly took it into the gutter, suggesting the president might be implicated
in the sex-trafficking investigation of Jeffrey Epstein, a multimillionaire who
hanged himself in a federal jail in New York in 2019.
He then
endorsed the impeachment of Mr. Trump and vowed to outlast him in politics.
“Trump has
3.5 years left as president,” Mr. Musk wrote on X, “but I will be around for
40-plus years.”
The
president, who started off with rather mild criticism that he had been
“disappointed” in Mr. Musk, was soon declaring that the billionaire had gone
“CRAZY!”
Mr. Trump’s
allies took up the fight and rallied to his side: Stephen K. Bannon, one of the
president’s former advisers, called for Mr. Musk to be deported. Mr. Musk’s
supporters, in turn, have railed against the president online, even on the
president’s own platform.
“Trump has
always governed with chaos, but I think anybody who thought that a second term
in office was going to be disciplined and steady, this disabuses them of that
notion,” said William G. Howell, the dean of the Johns Hopkins University
School of Government and Policy. “And still, even when you know what’s coming,
it’s hard not to repeatedly, continually be surprised at the level of vitriol
and just how public and sudden it is. It’s really extraordinary.”
On Capitol
Hill, Republicans have been wary about saying a cross word about either man and
seem to be hoping they will be able to wait out the war of words without having
to take a side. They have long been fearful of crossing Mr. Trump, and this
week, as Mr. Musk railed against the president’s legislation, they found
themselves scrambling to mollify the billionaire even as he threatened to
unseat them if they supported the Trump agenda.
Senator Mike
Lee, Republican of Utah, summed up the awkward spot G.O.P. lawmakers found
themselves in, like a child choosing which parent to stay with after a divorce.
“But … I
really like both of them,” Mr. Lee wrote on X.
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.


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