Trump
Says He Has No Desire to Mend His Relationship With Musk
The
president warned of “serious consequences” if Mr. Musk chose to back candidates
against Republicans who supported his domestic policy bill.
Jonathan
Swan Tyler Pager
By Jonathan
Swan and Tyler Pager
June 7, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/07/us/politics/trump-elon-musk.html
President
Trump said on Saturday that he believed his relationship with Elon Musk was
over after the two sparred publicly on social media this week, and he warned
there would be “serious consequences” if Mr. Musk financed candidates to run
against Republicans who voted in favor of the president’s domestic policy bill.
In a phone
interview with the NBC journalist Kristen Welker, Mr. Trump said he had no
plans to speak with Mr. Musk, calling the tech billionaire “disrespectful” to
the office of the president. When asked whether he had any desire to repair his
relationship with Mr. Musk, Mr. Trump said, “No.”
But this
seemed unlikely to be the president’s final word on the matter.
Despite
saying repeatedly over the past 24 hours that he is spending no time thinking
about Mr. Musk, Mr. Trump has taken numerous phone calls and questions from
reporters in which he has expounded on their relationship. On an Air Force One
flight to New Jersey on Friday afternoon, Mr. Trump spent time in his cabin
watching Fox News coverage of his feud with Mr. Musk, before walking to the
back cabin to answer questions from reporters on the topic.
Mr. Trump
has offered a range of views in his conversations over the past few days. In
some, Mr. Trump has described Mr. Musk as somebody who has gone “crazy.” In
others, he has expressed sympathy, as if Mr. Musk were a wayward son. He has
told associates that Mr. Musk is out of his mind on drugs, but at other times
he has said he wishes him well and has seemed to leave open the possibility of
reconciliation. He has also dangled the threat of canceling contracts that Mr.
Musk’s companies have with the federal government.
Behind the
scenes, people close to both men have tried to broker a détente and there have
been some signs of de-escalation. Mr. Musk has deleted some of his most
incendiary social media posts and Mr. Trump has been more restrained, by his
standards, in his public criticisms of Mr. Musk.
Advisers to
Mr. Trump say they think the relationship will never be the same again. But
some forecast an eventual truce, albeit one based on the transactional aspect
of their relationship, with both men recognizing their abilities to help and
harm each other.
Mr. Trump
has the power to boost or cripple Mr. Musk’s businesses, especially his rocket
company SpaceX, which relies on federal contracts.
And Mr. Musk
has his own leverage. He was given a window into Mr. Trump’s private world, and
some of Mr. Trump’s advisers have expressed concern about him weaponizing those
secrets. He is the biggest donor in Republican politics, has an outstanding
promise of a $100 million donation to Mr. Trump’s outside groups, and owns the
most powerful social media platform on the right.
Mr. Trump
has a long history of reconciling with even his harshest critics. Mr. Musk’s
cryptic accusation that Mr. Trump had links to a convicted sex offender,
Jeffrey Epstein, might seem to the uninitiated to be a bridge too far, but the
senior ranks of the Trump administration government are filled with people who
have made withering character assessments of Mr. Trump. They include his
secretary of state, who called him a con man, and his vice president, who
wondered whether he would be an American Hitler.
In a podcast
appearance with the comedian Theo Von, recorded on Thursday during the height
of the Musk-Trump online war, Vice President JD Vance went relatively easy on
the world’s richest man.
“Elon, he’s
an incredible entrepreneur,” Mr. Vance said. “And look, man, I’m always going
to be loyal to the president, and I hope that eventually Elon kind of comes
back into the fold.”
Mr. Vance
praised Mr. Musk’s work with the Department of Government Efficiency,
empathized with his frustrations with the political process in Washington, and
noted that “his businesses are being attacked nonstop.”
“I just
think it’s a huge mistake for the world’s wealthiest man, I think one of the
most transformational entrepreneurs ever, that’s Elon, to be at this war with
the world’s most powerful man,” Mr. Vance said.
The vice
president said Mr. Trump “has been very restrained, because the president
doesn’t think that he needs to be in a blood feud with Elon Musk, and I
actually think if Elon chilled out a little bit, everything would be fine.”
Though Mr. Vance did note that might not be possible after Mr. Von showed him
some of Mr. Musk’s more personal attacks on X, and he forcefully rejected Mr.
Musk’s accusation that Mr. Trump had a nefarious relationship with Mr. Epstein.
Mr. Musk,
who poured millions of dollars into the Trump campaign last year, spearheaded a
massive government restructuring project in recent months, cutting thousands of
federal jobs before he returned to running his businesses last week.
His
vociferous opposition to the president’s bill, expressed on social media,
touched off the two men’s dispute on Thursday. But he has since removed his
most incendiary social media posts about Mr. Trump, notably his accusation that
the Trump administration was blocking the release of information about Mr.
Epstein because the files somehow implicated the president, who had been a
friend of Mr. Epstein’s for years before falling out with him. Mr. Musk did not
provide evidence for the claim.
Another of
Mr. Musk’s deleted posts was a vow that his company SpaceX would decommission
its Dragon spacecraft, which NASA has used to transport crew to the
International Space Station. That comment came in response to a post by Mr.
Trump on Truth Social that he could save the government billions of dollars by
canceling Mr. Musk’s federal contracts.
Mr. Trump
was asked on the Air Force One flight to New Jersey on Friday how seriously he
was considering canceling Mr. Musk’s contracts. He did not rule it out.
“He’s got a
lot of money. He gets a lot of subsidy, so we’ll take a look at that,” Mr.
Trump said. “Only if it’s fair for him and for the country, I would certainly
think about it. But it has to be fair.”
On that same
flight, he also avoided attacking Mr. Musk when pressed by reporters and said
he wished him and his companies well.
But by
Saturday morning, he was back to criticizing Mr. Musk.
Jonathan
Swan is a White House reporter for The Times, covering the administration of
Donald J. Trump. Contact him securely on Signal: @jonathan.941
Tyler Pager
is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his
administration.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário