White House
Memo
Musk’s
Cabinet Cameo: The Elephant in the Room Wore Black
At the first
cabinet meeting of his second term, President Trump asked Elon Musk to speak
first. The man tasked with slashing the federal government spoke far more than
anyone else, other than Mr. Trump.
Shawn
McCreesh
By Shawn
McCreesh
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/26/us/politics/elon-musk-cabinet.html
Feb. 26,
2025
About 12
minutes into the first meeting of his new cabinet, President Trump addressed
the elephant in the room. This was rather easy for him to do, since the
elephant was standing 10 feet away, dressed all in black, hovering over the
head of the table at which the president and the members of his cabinet sat.
“Is anybody
unhappy with Elon?” Mr. Trump asked. Nervous laughter began to ripple around
the room. “If you are,” Mr. Trump continued, “we’ll throw him out of here.” The
cabinet started clapping.
It was meant
as a joke — but just how funny did the various officials and aides crammed into
the cabinet room really find the situation to be?
Days
earlier, Elon Musk had gone over all their heads, ordering millions of federal
workers to submit a written explanation of how they spend their days or else
face termination.
Some of the
cabinet secretaries and agency heads balked. Employees at the Departments of
State (led by Marco Rubio, who sat on Mr. Trump’s right) and Defense (led by
Pete Hegseth, who sat on Mr. Trump’s left) were told not to comply with Mr.
Musk’s order. Same for the Departments of Energy, Homeland Security and
Justice.
Mr. Musk
then began to post about the many people who had “failed even that inane test,
urged on in some cases by their managers.” The White House press secretary was
unable or unwilling to explain what was happening or who reported to whom. It
seemed as though the first true power struggle of the second Trump
administration was underway.
The
president tried to pretend all was well, but he seemed to understand on
Wednesday that there was trouble in his court. “ALL CABINET MEMBERS ARE
EXTREMELY HAPPY WITH ELON,” he posted a few hours before the meeting. “The
Media will see that at the Cabinet Meeting this morning!!!”
The cabinet
members stared expectantly at Mr. Musk as he stood up a few minutes into the
meeting and began to hold forth.
At first, it
seemed as though he might have been relegated to a lesser power position in the
meeting. He was not given an actual seat at the table; he was put in the row of
chairs behind it, alongside other aides who are not at the cabinet level, such
as Stephen Miller and Peter Navarro. But then the president asked the tech
mogul to speak first — “I’d like to have Elon Musk please say a few words” —
and Mr. Musk spent much of the rest of the meeting standing over the table at
which the cabinet sat. He spoke far more than anyone else, other than Mr.
Trump.
Mr. Musk
explained to the cabinet members that he had sent that demand to their
employees only after clearing it with the president.
“I said,
‘Can we send out an email to everyone just saying what did you get done last
week,’ and the president said yes,” he told them. This was a reversal of the
way things usually work in Washington — it used to be that underlings would
take the fall even if the boss was to blame. Now the underling was publicly
pointing the finger at the boss to mollify the other underlings he had trampled
over, while the boss nodded along.
It was
fascinating to watch Mr. Musk as he attempted to manage both up and down at the
same time. “President Trump has put together the best cabinet ever, literally,”
he said. “I don’t think that such a talented team has ever been assembled.”
The talented
team stared back at him. He was costumed very differently from them. He wore a
black MAGA hat and the same “Tech Support” T-shirt he had on last week when he
sat for a joint interview with the president on Fox News. “I actually just call
myself a humble tech support,” the world’s richest man said, chuckling at this
little bit of modesty. A few cabinet secretaries laughed along politely.
Mr. Musk
tried to appeal to their sense of pity for the difficult work he has
undertaken. “I’m taking a lot of flack,” he said, “and getting a lot of death
threats, by the way.” He wanted them to understand just how crucial his work
is. “If we don’t do this,” he said, slowing down for emphasis, “America will go
bankrupt. That’s why it has to be done.” (A report in the Washington Post
published Wednesday found that Mr. Musk’s business empire is built on $38
billion in government funding.)
The many
heads in the room turned back and forth, looking to Mr. Musk one minute and Mr.
Trump the next. The members of the cabinet must contend with two billionaire
bosses — both of whom command millions of followers on the social media
platforms they own, and who are known for attacking anyone who dares to defy
them.
But before
the first cabinet meeting of the second Trump administration adjourned, the
president made sure everyone knew who was actually in charge. A reporter wanted
to know how he thought about “executive control” and the power of the
presidency. “Is it your view of your authority,” the reporter asked, “that you
have the power to call up any one or all of the people seated at this table and
issue orders that they’re bound to follow?”
Mr. Trump
lowered his voice somewhat dramatically. “Oh, yeah,” he said, “they’ll follow
the orders, yes, they will.”
Nobody
mistook that one for a joke.
Shawn
McCreesh is a White House reporter for The Times covering the Trump
administration. More about Shawn McCreesh
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