Column |
Corridors
Trump
Tells Inner Circle That Musk Will Leave Soon
The
president is pleased with Elon Musk, but the decision comes as the tech mogul
increasingly looks like a political liability.
By Rachael
Bade
04/02/2025
11:17 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2025/04/02/trump-musk-leaving-political-liability-00265784
Rachael Bade
is POLITICO's Capitol bureau chief and senior Washington columnist. She is a
former co-author of POLITICO Playbook and co-author of "Unchecked: The
Untold Story Behind Congress's Botched Impeachments of Donald Trump." Her
reported column, Corridors, illuminates how power pulses through Washington,
from Capitol Hill to the White House and beyond.
President
Donald Trump has told his inner circle, including members of his Cabinet, that
Elon Musk will be stepping back in the coming weeks from his current role as
governing partner, ubiquitous cheerleader and Washington hatchet man.
The
president remains pleased with Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency
initiative, but both men have decided in recent days that it will soon be time
for Musk to return to his businesses and take on a supporting role, according
to three Trump insiders who were granted anonymity to describe the evolving
relationship.
Musk’s
looming retreat comes as some Trump administration insiders and many outside
allies have become frustrated with his unpredictability and increasingly view
the billionaire as a political liability, a dynamic that was thrown into stark
relief Tuesday when a conservative judge Musk vocally supported lost his bid
for a Wisconsin Supreme Court seat by 10 points.
It also
represents a stark shift in the Trump-Musk relationship from a month ago, when
White House officials and allies were predicting Musk was “here to stay” and
that Trump would find a way to blow past the 130-day time limit.
One senior
administration official said Musk is likely to retain an informal role as an
adviser and continue to be an occasional face around the White House grounds.
Another cautioned that anyone who thinks Musk is going to disappear entirely
from Trump’s orbit is “fooling themselves.”
The
transition, the insiders said, is likely to correspond to the end of Musk’s
time as a “special government employee,” a special status that temporarily
exempts him from some ethics and conflict-of-interest rules. That 130-day
period is expected to expire in late May or early June.
Musk’s
defenders inside the administration believe that the time is right for a
transition, given their view that there’s only so much more he can cut from
government agencies without shaving too close to the bone.
But many
others say he’s an unpredictable, unmanageable force who has had issues
communicating his plans with Cabinet secretaries and through the White House
chain of command led by chief of staff Susie Wiles, frequently sending them
into a frenzy with unexpected and off-message comments on X, his social-media
platform — including sharing unvetted and uncoordinated plans to gut federal
agencies.
The
political threat Musk poses was highlighted Tuesday after Democrats seized on
Musk’s roughly $20 million investment in the Wisconsin race, with some openly
calling it a referendum on the polarizing mogul.
Trump,
however, had already started easing the glide path starting more than a week
before the election — including at a March 24 Cabinet meeting where he told
attendees that Musk would be transitioning out of the administration, according
to one of the insiders, who did not attend the meeting but was briefed on the
comments. A senior administration official confirmed Trump discussed Musk’s
transition at the meeting.
Immediately
after making the announcement, Trump invited reporters and cameras in for the
tail end of the meeting, where he lavished praise on Musk, who attended the
meeting wearing a red MAGA hat. Cabinet secretaries — many of whom had clashed
with Musk just weeks before over Musk’s bull-in-a-china-shop approach to
cutting their departments — in turn jumped in to hail his bureaucracy-slashing
campaign.
“Elon, I
want to thank you — I know you’ve been through a lot,” Trump said, mentioning
death threats and the spate vandalism directed at the cars built by Tesla
before calling him “a patriot” and “a friend of mine.”
Both men
subsequently hinted publicly at a transition. When Fox News’ Bret Baier asked
Musk on Thursday whether he’d be ready to leave when his special government
employee status expires, he essentially declared mission accomplished: “I think
we will have accomplished most of the work required to reduce the deficit by $1
trillion within that time frame.”
On Monday
night, Trump told reporters that “at some point Elon’s going to want to go back
to his company,” adding: “He wants to. I’d keep him as long as I could keep
him.”
“As the
President said, this White House would love to keep Elon around for as long as
possible,” White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said Tuesday as election
results from Wisconsin rolled in. “Elon has been instrumental in executing the
President’s agenda, and will continue this good work until the President says
otherwise.”
But many
close to Trump are increasingly relieved that Musk is expected to soon move on
from his central role at Trump’s side and that the litany of DOGE surprises —
which have ranged from a weekend email blast demanding federal workers list
their work output to accidental cuts to Ebola prevention programs — might
finally be coming to a close.
That’s to
say nothing of their concerns about Musk as a political liability who has
served as a rallying point for fractured Democrats.
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