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Friday briefing: From White House sleepovers to Epstein allegations, how the relationship between Musk and Trump spectacularly imploded

Friday briefing: From White House sleepovers to Epstein allegations, how the relationship between Musk and Trump spectacularly imploded

The Guardian15 hours ago

Good morning. 'I love @realDonaldTrump as much as a straight man can love another man,' Elon Musk posted on X in February. He had numerous sleepovers at the White House, where he ate a late-night tub of caramel Häagen-Dazs at Trump's suggestion. But relationships are hard, and all the harder when the protagonists are billionaire narcissists whose exes tend to be asked to sign NDAs.
Earlier this week, Musk posted an astonishing broadside against his former boss's flagship piece of tax and spending legislation, calling it a 'disgusting abomination'. And, you know, passion makes us say things we regret sometimes! Maybe they could patch things up, you might have thought.
Then yesterday Trump said he was 'very disappointed in Elon', threatened to cut Musk's companies' government contracts, said he'd fired him, mocked him for refusing makeup when he was in the Oval Office with a black eye, and called him 'CRAZY'. And Musk accused Trump of lying, said he should be impeached, mused on creating a new political party, suggested he would decommission the SpaceX craft that brings astronauts back from the International Space Station, and, er, alleged his former boss was in the Epstein files.
Even Kanye West, a true Don and Elon stan, suggested the whole thing was a bit much. Do you remember the fight between Adam Driver and Scarlett Johansson in Marriage Story? It's like that, except with Steve Bannon chipping in to suggest that one of them should be deported, and with the forlorn child played by Tesla's plummeting share price.
Anyway. Musk has claimed that the basis of this grotesque political divorce is his ideological commitment to fiscal responsibility. For today's newsletter, I spoke to Hugo Lowell, the Guardian's White House correspondent, about why the truth may be considerably more venal than that. Here are the headlines.
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The Musk intervention that sent the relationship spiralling was an attack on Trump's so-called 'big, beautiful bill' – a vast legislative compendium of the president's tax and spending policies which would extend tax cuts, slash the social safety net, benefit the rich above the poor, end Biden-era green energy incentives and ramp up spending on border security and the military. Impartial analysis suggests that it could add an astonishing $2.4tn to the US deficit within 10 years.
Musk appeared to feel liberated to speak in such critical terms by the end of his tenure as a government official. He said that he is outraged at a package that will turn Americans into 'debt slaves'. But as events of the last 24 hours seem to corroborate, his attack on such a major plank of Trump's policy agenda may have more personal roots. 'His discontent had been simmering for a while,' Hugo said. 'And now he's out of the White House, he doesn't have anything to lose.'
How has Musk's relationship with Trump changed?
While Musk appeared to run rampant through government in his role at the so-called 'department of government efficiency' (Doge), there were some limits on how much latitude Trump was prepared to extend him.
The inflection point in the relationship, Hugo said, was in March, when it emerged that Musk had arranged private briefings on the Pentagon's plans for any potential war with China without consulting the White House first. Even by the standards of the Trump administration, that represented a flagrant conflict of interest, given Musk's considerable business interests in China. Those who are sceptical about Trump's interest in propriety suggest that he was more piqued by the sense that Musk was operating outside his control.
'That really changed the dynamic,' Hugo said. 'He didn't like that he had to find out about it in the New York Times, and he didn't like the notion that this guy was profiting off him. And there are a lot of people in the administration who thought he was too overtly amassing power for his own personal gain.'
Musk worked as a 'special government employee' – a temporary hire limited to 130 days a year in a government role. 'He wanted that extended,' Hugo said. 'But the White House counsel's office was clear that he couldn't serve any longer.'
And just days after his official departure, the White House withdrew its nominee for Nasa administrator, Jared Isaacman, after it emerged that he had previously donated to Democrats. Isaacman, a billionaire CEO and private astronaut, was Musk's pick for the role, and had close ties to his company SpaceX.
'That was really important for him,' Hugo said; indeed, he referred to it in his X broadside yesterday. Alongside Doge's dubious record in finding the savings it promised, Musk's failure to secure his preferred nominee for Treasury secretary, Howard Lutnick, and the brand damage his role did to Tesla, there is a sense that his tenure has left him worse off than when he started, he added. 'He may be asking: what's he got to show for his time in government to his own benefit?'
What does Musk say the rift is about?
Musk initially focused his public anger on the 'big, beautiful bill'. That 'massive, outrageous, pork-filled congressional spending bill' is a 'disgusting abomination,' Musk said on X on Tuesday. 'Shame on those who voted for it.'
By this account, and even if his language is pretty ripe, Musk's disquiet is narrowly focused on a matter of policy in the public interest. He argues that as it now stands, the tax bill will undermine the work he did at Doge, and casts himself as a crusader for responsible fiscal management. He interspersed his attacks on Trump yesterday with old clips of Republicans arguing for a balanced budget.
The issue is still a live one because the bill is yet to make its way through the Senate: 'It is still likely to pass, but not without major changes,' Hugo said. 'Generally speaking, Republican senators are much more fiscally conservative.' Yesterday, the Hill reported claims that there are two 'pretty definite 'no's' already, meaning that Republicans can only afford one more to keep the bill alive.
Criticisms from fiscal conservatives have intensified since Musk's attack, and one of the two Republican senators expected to vote no, Ron Johnson, has called for 'a smaller version of the bill'. While Johnson and another senator, Rand Paul, want to make deeper cuts, others are alarmed about what voters will make of measures already in the bill that would mean about 10 million people losing coverage under a health insurance scheme for people on low incomes, Medicaid. Trump, for his part, has told House Republicans: 'Don't fuck around with Medicaid.'
If fiscal hawks like Johnson and Paul prevail, they are likely to credit Musk with giving them momentum – but while the result might be a bill that adds less to the deficit, that would probably alienate many working-class voters who supported Trump last year.
Are there any other factors?
Consequential though his intervention might be, there are good reasons to doubt that a zealous commitment to balancing the budget is the real reason for Musk's decision to go public. After all, Musk supported the Democrats until he took umbrage at Biden policies that supported trade unions and a decision to exclude Tesla from an electric vehicle summit at the White House. 'It's not ideological, it's self-serving,' Hugo said. 'He may talk about the deficit for cover, but the way he has conducted himself politically in the past suggests that he primarily operates out of self-interest.'
This time, the real bone of contention – beyond his broader alienation from the White House – appears to have been a provision in the legislation ending a $7,500 electric vehicle tax credit that helps people buy Teslas. Yesterday, Musk called the decision 'very unfair!!', while Trump said: 'He only developed a problem when he found out I would cut the EV mandate.'
'Musk really wanted that to be in there,' Hugo said. 'Tesla spent about a quarter of a million on lobbying to have that included. This is at a time when the company isn't doing that well, partly because of Musk's own image, but also because of a broader slowdown in electric vehicle orders.' Yesterday, the 14% fall in Tesla's share price saw $152bn off its value.
How much does all of this matter?
It's less than 24 hours since Politico published a story suggesting that Trump was likely to take an indulgent view of Musk's indiscretions – and quoting administration sources pointing out that Musk's posts had targeted the bill and Congress rather than Trump himself. That view is now, obviously, impossible to sustain.
Still, you can see why the White House would be nervous. Trump's pantomime fallouts are very rarely with people who have the power to do him serious harm; Musk, though, has hinted that he might fund primary challenges to Republicans who back the bill, warning that 'in November next year, we fire all politicians who betrayed the American people'.
Hugo is sceptical that he will follow through. 'A gazillion things will happen between now and then, and I just don't believe this is going to be his animating issue,' he said. But even if he chooses not to spend lavishly, three and a half years of allegations akin to the ones he made yesterday about the Epstein files (which, the White House said, constituted 'an unfortunate episode from Elon') aren't likely to do wonders for Trump's popularity.
British readers may recall another instance of a chaotic leader getting on the wrong side of a kingmaking ally with a god complex. Donald Trump can't be forced to resign like Boris Johnson was – but even Dominic Cummings wasn't armed with almost $400bn.
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The Guardian splashes on 'Labour bans bonuses for 10 water bosses amid worsening pollution' and the i paper leads with 'UK water boss bonuses finally banned amid public anger at sewage scandal'. The Telegraph has 'Reform civil war over burka ban' and the Times leads on 'Migration could force reform of rights treaty'. The FT splashes on 'Trump and Xi dial down rhetoric and agree new round of trade talks' and the Daily Mail has 'Russia blames UK for drone attack on jets'. The Metro leads on 'We've never felt hurt like this' as two teens sentenced for the manslaughter of an 80-year-old man walking his dog, and the Express has 'Never forget their sacrifice' on D-day veterans.
Our critics' roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now
BookA Different Kind of Power by Jacinda Ardern
Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand's former prime minister, captured global attention with her empathetic leadership. Now, she's written a strikingly different kind of political memoir. The 'disarmingly likable' and 'warm' Ardern steers away from the minutiae of domestic politics, focusing instead on globally resonant events, such as the 2019 Christchurch mosque attack, and the more universally relatable dramas of her personal life. The result is an emotionally rich and candid read. Gaby Hinsliff
TVStick | ★★★☆☆
This series stars an 'eminently watchable' Owen Wilson as washed-up golf pro Pryce Cahill. A televised meltdown at the height of his career has left him reduced to selling golf gear, giving lessons to wealthy retirees, and hustling for cash in bars. His shot at redemption appears when he discovers teen, Santi (Peter Dager), might just be a golf prodigy. The easy to watch series never outstays its welcome, and the cast all deliver solid performances. Lucy Mangan
MusicPulp: More | ★★★★☆Pulp's first album in 24 years delivers anthems and rage for their next life stage: middle age. On Background Noise, they explore how divorce affects the possibility of finding love again, while Tina channels the spirit of Pulp classics' Babies and Disco 2000, but the missed chances now come with added weight of time. Musically, there are touches of disco, Gallic chanson, tinny electronics and even some violin. A nostalgic album that will delight longtime fans and quietly move those who aren't. Alexis Petridis
The Swiss village buried by a glacier collapse
Tess McClure reports on a landslide in Switzerland that left one person missing and destroyed a village
A bit of good news to remind you that the world's not all bad
Edward Burra's work, especially his watercolours capturing demi-monde life in interwar Paris and New York, is a vivid, distinctive record of the era. His paintings of urban life and queer culture during the Roaring Twenties are held in major collections, as is his extensive archive at Tate Britain. Yet the 20th-century painter, draughtsman and printmaker is still often called 'one of the great known unknowns of modern British art.'
A new exhibition at Tate Britain aims to change that, putting his often-overlooked work centre stage and introducing Burra to a new generation, more than 50 years after his last show at the gallery.
And finally, the Guardian's puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until Monday.
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Report: Trump plans to save TikTok for a third time
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Report: Trump plans to save TikTok for a third time

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What caused Trump & Elon Musk's explosive fallout? – from NASA spat to key role of Don's teen relative, I know the truth
What caused Trump & Elon Musk's explosive fallout? – from NASA spat to key role of Don's teen relative, I know the truth

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What caused Trump & Elon Musk's explosive fallout? – from NASA spat to key role of Don's teen relative, I know the truth

The smart money was always on these two galactic-sized egos falling out HARRY COLE What caused Trump & Elon Musk's explosive fallout? – from NASA spat to key role of Don's teen relative, I know the truth THE richest man in the world going toe-to-toe with the most powerful man on the planet . . . what could possibly go wrong? And has the most outlandish politician in American history finally met his match? Advertisement 7 Elon Musk, left, looks down on Donald Trump during a White House press conference Credit: AP 7 Musk toured the swing states at last year's election telling the world that Trump was the greatest thing since sliced bread Credit: AFP 7 Trump was considering selling his own Tesla, which has spent weeks parked outside the Oval Office Credit: AP From the moment neuro-diverse rocket man Elon Musk backed New York real estate heavy Donald J. Trump to return to the White House, the smart money was on these two galactic-sized egos falling out. I hear it's the galaxy and beyond that has been at the centre of their tensions, but more on that later — as last night Washington was awash with claims Musk's attempts to befriend Kai Trump, the 18-year-old future golf star granddaughter of the President, also played a hefty part in the atomic row. 'Bankrupting America is not OK – kill the bill' But the powerful pair certainly have fallen out, trading public blows on their social media sites of choice — the very tech platforms that have both made them and could yet see them crash to back down to earth. Asked if they could reconcile yesterday, Trump slammed Musk as 'the man who has lost his mind'. Advertisement In the end, the most famous bromance in political history lasted less than a year, and the fallout risks dragging them both down. 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JD Vance silence on Musk may be the most Game of Thrones tactic ever — and Trump might not even notice
JD Vance silence on Musk may be the most Game of Thrones tactic ever — and Trump might not even notice

The Independent

time16 minutes ago

  • The Independent

JD Vance silence on Musk may be the most Game of Thrones tactic ever — and Trump might not even notice

The kingdom is in turmoil, the great Houses of Musk and Trump at war, and their subjects forced to choose sides. But as the scheming Littlefinger in Game of Thrones famously said as he plotted to take the King's place: 'chaos is a ladder.' And so it is for JD Vance, the ostensibly loyal vice president, and perhaps the person who stands to benefit the most from the chaos unleashed by the feud between Elon Musk and Donald Trump — which is perhaps why he's remaining uncharacteristically subdued. Vance has never been one to shy away from a fight, especially an online one, especially if it's in defense of his boss. He once launched a 400-word diatribe against historian Niall Ferguson for criticizing Trump's Ukraine policy, slamming his 'moralistic garbage' and 'historical illiteracy.' He had no problem accusing senior members of his own party of ' pettiness ' for voting against what Trump wanted, and mocked world leaders who've had run ins with the president. The practicing Catholic even found himself on the wrong side of the Pope himself when he got into another online beef with British politician Rory Stewart over Trump's deportation policies. So one would expect the online warrior to rush to the defense of his president in response to the firestorm of abuse unleashed by Musk against the president on Thursday, which began with accusations of ungratefulness and ended with claims of him being close to Jeffrey Epstein. But Vance has been remarkably quiet. His only public comment at the time of writing has been the kind of terse statement a wife gives in support of a cheating politician spouse. 'President Trump has done more than any person in my lifetime to earn the trust of the movement he leads. I'm proud to stand beside him,' Vance wrote on X. The next day, he continued with his lawyerly posts. 'There are many lies the corporate media tells about President Trump. One of the most glaring is that he's impulsive or short-tempered. Anyone who has seen him operate under pressure knows that's ridiculous,' he wrote. 'It's (maybe) the single biggest disconnect between fake media perception and reality,' he went on. Where was the combative Vance who demanded the Ukrainian president say thank you to his boss in the Oval Office? The one who told Kamala Harris to 'go to hell' over the Biden administration's handling of the withdrawal from Afghanistan? Instead, Vance did not utter Musk's name in the 24 hours since the feud burst into the open. Vance was asked by Trump to remain diplomatic in his dealings with Musk, The Independent learned from a source familiar with the situation. Regardless, the VP has other motivations for keeping quiet. For years, he has been dogged by rumors of dual loyalties between the tech billionaires who fueled his rise and the president he now serves. Vance first came to public attention as the best-selling author of Hillbilly Elegy, a memoir of a rough Appalachian upbringing that many liberals praised as an intellectual explanation of Trump's appeal to the white working class. But before that book set him on a path to Congress and the Senate, he was already being courted by a set of right-wing tech billionaires known as the 'PayPal mafia' — the billionaires Musk, David Sacks and Peter Thiel, who worked together at the pioneering online payments company back in the late Nineties and early Noughties and were bound together by a belief in deregulation, libertarianism and later, by darker right-wing ideology that railed against multiculturalism. Vance was working in venture capital at the time and went to work for Thiel at his San Francisco investment house, Mithril Capital. Thiel would be instrumental to Vance's rise, backing his campaign for Senate in 2021-22 to the tune of $15 million, and reportedly introduced Vance to Trump. The trio of Musk, Sacks and Thiel were instrumental in convincing Trump to choose Vance as his running mate, seeing in him an ideological ally, the libertarian tech investor who could one day take over as president. Some have gone so far as to call Vance a Manchurian Candidate for the tech elite. When the feud between Musk and Trump spilled out into the open, Musk was not shy about announcing his desire for Vance to take over as president. He responded to a tweet calling for Trump to be impeached and replaced with Vance with one word: 'Yes.' That is not an empty threat. Vance's path to the White House would inevitably require the support of Musk, the man who spent $395 million on electing Republicans in 2024. So his decision to ignore Musk's call for mutiny is an interesting — and calculated — choice. Much like Littlefinger, Vance has made sharp ideological turns and formed strategic alliances to find his way to within arm's length of the throne. He was once vehemently opposed to Trump, only to radically change course to stand by his side in his quest for power. But, spoiler alert, his fictional counterpart's calculating and maneuvering didn't end well for him. Trump spent his entire first term weeding out traitors, and claims to have gotten very good at it over the years. Will he be able to sniff out Vance?

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