Theodore
Schleifer
June 11,
2025, 1:34 p.m. ET3 hours ago
Jonathan
Swan and Theodore Schleifer Reporting from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/06/11/us/trump-news#musk-trump
Musk
called Trump before publicly expressing regret for some of his online attacks
on the president.
President
Trump received a phone call from Elon Musk late on Monday night, outreach that
led to a public expression of regret by the billionaire early Wednesday for the
attacks he had lodged against the president in their extraordinary public
showdown last week, according to three people briefed on the conversation.
The call
came after the tech entrepreneur spoke privately on Friday with Vice President
JD Vance and the White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles, about a path to a
truce. Ms. Wiles told associates she had come to like working with Mr. Musk and
was one of his regular points of contact. The people spoke on the condition of
anonymity to describe the private discussions.
Those
conversations paved the way for the strikingly chastened tone Mr. Musk struck
in an X post early Wednesday, in which he wrote: “I regret some of my posts
about President @realDonaldTrump last week. They went too far.”
Representatives
of Mr. Trump and Mr. Musk did not respond to requests for comment.
Mr. Musk had
spent several days signaling that he wanted to make up with the president after
the two men engaged in a sharp series of personal attacks last Thursday that
played out from the Oval Office and on social media.
What began
as criticism by the tech billionaire of Mr. Trump’s signature domestic bill
devolved into an exchange of insults that mounted throughout the day, as the
president claimed he had not needed Mr. Musk’s help to get elected and Mr. Musk
tried to link Mr. Trump to the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The night
after Mr. Musk spoke with Ms. Wiles and Mr. Vance, he deleted his social media
posts suggesting that the Trump administration was withholding the release of
government files about Mr. Epstein because they implicated the president.
It remains
to be seen how Mr. Trump will handle the attempted rapprochement and whether
the two men’s relationship can be restored.
In the wake
of their showdown, Mr. Trump told advisers that he had no interest in talking
to Mr. Musk, and was done with him, a sentiment he reiterated in interviews
with reporters.
But behind
the scenes, advisers from both camps worked to arrange a détente.
Mr. Musk did
not intend to leave the White House in such a huff, according to people close
to him, even after he criticized Mr. Trump’s domestic policy bill as fiscally
irresponsible.
But the
president’s decision to withdraw his nomination of Jared Isaacman, a close Musk
associate, to run NASA was a humiliating turn for Mr. Musk. Over the ensuing
week, he began venting to friends, both in person and over text messages, about
Mr. Isaacman’s defenestration. In the days since the blowup between the two
men, several people close to Mr. Musk encouraged him to put an end to the
fight, believing that he had overstepped.
Initially,
Mr. Musk showed no signs of backing down from his confrontation with the
president. On Friday, he replied to an X user who said he should apologize to
Mr. Trump with: “What’s the apology for exactly?” Mr. Musk added that he would
only apologize after “a full dump of the Epstein files.” (He later deleted that
post.)
By Sunday,
Mr. Musk was realigning himself with Mr. Trump, sharing a screenshot of one of
Mr. Trump’s social media posts that criticized Gov. Gavin Newsom of California
for his handling of the immigration protests in Los Angeles.
Both Mr.
Musk and Mr. Trump have a lot at stake in the relationship, but it was Mr. Musk
who appeared more eager to make amends. Mr. Trump threatened to cancel billions
of dollars’ worth of contracts that Mr. Musk’s rocket company, SpaceX, has with
the federal government.
Mr. Musk is
not without leverage, however. He is the biggest donor in Republican politics
and had promised to give an additional $100 million to Mr. Trump’s outside
groups ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. He also has extensive knowledge of
the inner dynamics of the administration, and Mr. Trump has been keen to avoid
a repeat of his first term, when former aides left on bad terms and went on to
write books about their experiences or become witnesses in some of his legal
entanglements.
Mr. Trump
almost never apologizes. One rare exception came in 2018, when he privately
expressed regret to Prime Minister Teresa May of Britain for critical remarks
he had made about her in an interview that published as she was about to honor
him, according to a person with knowledge of what took place.
For his
part, Mr. Musk has at times shown contrition for his scorched-earth tactics on
social media. In 2018, he apologized to a British cave expert after calling him
a “pedo guy” on Twitter. In 2023, shortly after buying the social media
company, he apologized for saying an employee whom he had let go was using a
disability as an “excuse.”
Ryan Mac,
Kate Conger and Maggie Haberman contributed reporting.


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