logo
Vance says Musk making a 'huge mistake' in going after Trump but also tries to downplay the attacks

Vance says Musk making a 'huge mistake' in going after Trump but also tries to downplay the attacks

CNBC16 hours ago

Vice President JD Vance said Elon Musk was making a "huge mistake" going after President Donald Trump in a storm of bitter and inflammatory social media posts after a falling out between the two men.
But the vice president, in an interview released Friday after the very public blow up between the world's richest man and arguably the world's most powerful, also tried to downplay Musk's blistering attacks as an "emotional guy" who got frustrated.
"I hope that eventually Elon comes back into the fold. Maybe that's not possible now because he's gone so nuclear," Vance said.
Vance's comments come as other Republicans in recent days have urged the two men, who months ago were close allies spending significant time together, to mend fences.
Musk's torrent of social media posts attacking Trump came as the president portrayed him as disgruntled and "CRAZY" and threatened to cut the government contracts held by his businesses.
Musk, who runs electric vehicle maker Tesla, internet company Starlink and rocket company SpaceX, lambasted Trump's centerpiece tax cuts and spending bill but also suggested Trump should be impeached and claimed without evidence that the government was concealing information about the president's association with infamous pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
"Look, it happens to everybody," Vance said in the interview. "I've flown off the handle way worse than Elon Musk did in the last 24 hours."
Vance made the comments in an interview with "manosphere" comedian Theo Von, who last month joked about snorting drugs off a mixed-race baby and the sexuality of men in the U.S. Navy when he opened for Trump at a military base in Qatar.
The vice president told Von that as Musk for days was calling on social media for Congress to kill Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill," the president was "getting a little frustrated, feeling like some of the criticisms were unfair coming from Elon, but I think has been very restrained because the president doesn't think that he needs to be in a blood feud with Elon Musk."
"I actually think if Elon chilled out a little bit, everything would be fine," he added.
Musk appeared by Saturday morning to have deleted his posts about Epstein.
The interview was taped Thursday as Musk's posts were unfurling on X, the social media network the billionaire owns.
During the interview, Von showed the vice president Musk's claim that Trump's administration hasn't released all the records related to sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein because Trump is mentioned in them.
Vance responded to that, saying, "Absolutely not. Donald Trump didn't do anything wrong with Jeffrey Epstein."
"This stuff is just not helpful," Vance said in response to another post shared by Musk calling for Trump to be impeached and replaced with Vance.
"It's totally insane. The president is doing a good job."
Vance called Musk an "incredible entrepreneur," and said that Musk's Department of Government Efficiency, which sought to cut government spending and laid off or pushed out thousands of workers, was "really good."
The vice president also defended the bill that has drawn Musk's ire, and said its central goal was not to cut spending but to extend the 2017 tax cuts approved in Trump's first term.
The bill would slash spending but also leave some 10.9 million more people without health insurance and spike deficits by $2.4 trillion over the decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
Musk has warned that the bill will increase the federal deficit and called it a "disgusting abomination."
"It's a good bill," Vance said. "It's not a perfect bill."
He also said it was ridiculous for some House Republicans who voted for the bill but later found parts objectional to claim they hadn't had time to read it.
Vance said the text had been available for weeks and said, "the idea that people haven't had an opportunity to actually read it is ridiculous."
Elsewhere in the interview, Vance laughed as Von cracked jokes about famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass' sexuality.
"We're gonna talk to the Smithsonian about putting up an exhibit on that," Vance joked. "And Theo Von, you can be the narrator for this new understanding of the history of Frederick Douglass."
The podcaster also asked the vice president if he "got high" on election night to celebrate Trump's victory.
Vance laughed and joked that he wouldn't admit it if he did.
"I did not get high," he then said. "I did have a fair amount to drink that night."
The interview was taped in Nashville at a restaurant owned by musician Kid Rock, a Trump ally.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tesla shareholders face staggering new hurdle after company enacts controversial policy: 'A formidable barrier'
Tesla shareholders face staggering new hurdle after company enacts controversial policy: 'A formidable barrier'

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tesla shareholders face staggering new hurdle after company enacts controversial policy: 'A formidable barrier'

Tesla raised the bar for shareholders to sue the company board or executives for breach of fiduciary duties. The change took effect May 15 and requires an investor or group of investors to hold 3% of the electric vehicle maker's stock "to institute or maintain a derivative proceeding," CNBC reported. Tesla's market cap is $1.123 trillion, so a plaintiff would have to own shares worth $33.7 billion. "Obviously, for a company of Tesla's size, that would be a formidable barrier to anyone bringing a lawsuit for breach of fiduciary duty," Tulane Law School's Ann Lipton told CNBC in an email. The change was enabled by a Texas law that "allows corporations to limit shareholder lawsuits against insiders for breach of fiduciary duty," the outlet added. With shareholder approval, Tesla moved its incorporation site from Delaware to the Lone Star State in June 2024. An investor who owned nine shares of Tesla stock sued the company in 2018, and CEO Elon Musk's $56 billion compensation package was revoked in January 2024. Musk is by far the richest person on the planet, and his wealth makes him nearly untouchable. He helped to pioneer the EV movement by becoming an early investor in Tesla in 2003, and the company has been known for innovative technology and industry-leading breakthroughs. Recently, however, the South African has drawn criticism for straying into American and European politics, including spending lavishly on the U.S. presidential election campaign of Donald Trump, leading government spending cuts as the head of the U.S. Department of Government Efficiency, and supporting the far-right Alternative for Germany party. Activists have protested these actions, and Tesla charging stations, vehicles, and dealerships have been vandalized. Sales have plummeted, and Tesla stock spiraled downward, too, though it has regained much of its value. This upheaval and the larger perception change of Musk from groundbreaker to villain could stifle the uptake of EVs, which is one of the many things necessary to slow the rapid rise of global temperatures caused by the burning of fossil fuels for energy. It would take a massive coalition of shareholders to fight back against this move by Tesla, though companies are generally amenable to public pressure — especially when it comes to consumers' spending power. Tesla, for example, is shifting its focus from EV manufacturing to a robotaxi service and robotics to stabilize its future. Musk has a history of not delivering on outlandish promises, but it has not significantly slowed the company or deterred its supporters. What do you think of Tesla and Elon Musk? Elon is the man Love the company; hate the CEO I'm not a fan of either I don't have an opinion Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Air Force veteran Gina Ortiz Jones wins runoff race for San Antonio mayor
Air Force veteran Gina Ortiz Jones wins runoff race for San Antonio mayor

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Air Force veteran Gina Ortiz Jones wins runoff race for San Antonio mayor

San Antonio's next mayor will be Gina Ortiz Jones, a 44-year-old West Side native who rose from John Jay High School to the top ranks of the U.S. military on an ROTC scholarship. Jones defeated Rolando Pablos, a close ally of Texas GOP leaders, with 54% of the vote on Saturday night in a high-profile, bitterly partisan runoff. Thanks to new, longer terms that voters approved in November, this year's mayor and City Council winners will be the first to serve four-year terms before they must seek reelection. The closely watched runoff came after Jones took a commanding 10-percentage-point lead in last month's 27-candidate mayoral election, but weathered nearly $1 million in attacks from Pablos and his Republican allies. At the Dakota East Side Ice House, a beaming Jones said she was proud of a campaign that treated people with dignity and respect. She also said she was excited that San Antonio politics could deliver some positivity in an otherwise tumultuous news cycle. 'With everything happening around us at the federal level and at the state level, some of the most un-American things we have seen in a very, very long time, it's very heartening to see where we are right now,' she said shortly after the early results came in. When it became clear the results would hold, Jones returned to remark that 'deep in the heart of Texas,' San Antonio voters had reminded the world that it's a city built on 'compassion.' Chappell Roan's 'Pink Pony Club' blared over the speakers to the roughly 250 supporters celebrating with drinks on a hot evening. At Pablos' watch party, he said Jones' overwhelming victory surprised him. The conservative Northside votes he was counting on to carry him didn't wind up materializing. 'The fact is that San Antonio continues to be a blue city,' Pablos told reporters at the Drury Inn & Suites' Old Spanish Ballroom near La Cantera. 'This [race] became highly partisan, and today it showed.' After an overwhelmingly long ticket discouraged much voter interest in the first round, San Antonio's mayoral race suddenly took on new significance when it came down to a runoff between Jones, a two-time Democratic congressional candidate, and Pablos, a close ally of Texas' GOP leaders. The two City Hall outsiders boxed out a host of candidates with more local government experience, including four sitting council members, and sent local politicos scrambling into their partisan camps for an otherwise nonpartisan race. It also drew major interest from state and national political interests, with Republican and Democratic PACs each targeting a position that could be a springboard for a future politician from either party. Between the candidates and their supporting outside groups, the runoff had already drawn roughly $1.7 million in spending as of May 28 — the last date covered by campaign finance reports before the election. Both 2025 mayoral runoff campaigns and their supporting outside groups spent big on mailers, text messages and TV ads. At a recent Jones rally on the West Side, new Texas Democratic Party Chair Kendall Scudder said Republicans' willingness to sink unheard-of money into symbolic victories was enough to spur the Democratic state party to spend money on Jones' behalf near the end of the runoff — in a city where Democrats vastly outnumber Republicans. 'These races are supposed to be nonpartisan, they are the ones making them not nonpartisan,' Scudder said of Texas Republicans. 'They are the ones that are coming in and flooding money into these races … and we have to stand on the front lines of that.' For Jones, who most recently served as Air Force Under Secretary in the Biden administration, this is the third high-profile race Democratic interests have expected her to win. She came close in 2018 in Texas' 23rd Congressional District, losing by roughly 1,000 votes to Republican Will Hurd, then lost by a larger margin in the same district two years later to U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio. Both were multimillion-dollar, top-tier races in the battle for the U.S. House, and the losses stung so much that Jones chose to watch last month's election results in private — even though she'd led every public poll leading up to it. At her watch party on Saturday night, Jones was joined by the iconic local activist Rosie Castro and former Mayor Julián Castro, as well as representatives from an array of outside groups that helped her in the race: Texas Organizing Project, Vote Vets, and labor unions, to name a few. Underscoring the growing progressive influence at City Hall, Councilmembers Jalen McKee-Rodriguez (D2), Phyllis Viagran (D3), Edward Mungia (D4) and Teri Castillo (D5) also attended. Another new progressive, 24-year-old Ric Galvan, was celebrating a narrow victory for District 6 on the city's West Side. The Democratic National Committee, Texas Democratic Party and Democratic Mayors Association all put out statements congratulating Jones. 'With her win in a heavily-Latino city, Mayor-elect Jones will continue the legacy of Mayor Nirenberg and move San Antonio forward,' Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin said in a statement. 'From school boards to city councils to mayoral offices across the state, Texas voters are making their voice heard loud and clear: They want strong Democratic leaders who will fight for them.' Going into the night, conservatives controlled just one seat on San Antonio's City Council, while Republican elected officials on the whole have been nearing extinction in Bexar County. Nevertheless, Republicans saw a big opportunity in the nonpartisan city election. Mayors of Texas' major urban centers have steadily become less progressive as longtime incumbents termed out, and in the November election, President Donald Trump flipped two historically blue counties in South Texas — fueling greater intrigue about Hispanic voters becoming more Republican. Pablos and his allies sought to cast Jones as a progressive zealot, with a PAC supporting him dubbing her the 'AOC of Texas' in recent days and the San Antonio Police Officers' Association threatening that she would defund the police (something Jones has said she doesn't plan to do). Pablos purposefully dropped the 'Ortiz' from her name nearly every time he was in front of a microphone, and ran ads accusing Jones, who is Filipina, of pretending to be Hispanic. It was an unexpected approach from a well-known business attorney with good relationships on both sides of the aisle, and deviation from the 'unity candidate' he set out to be more than a year ago when describing plans for his first political venture in San Antonio. Pabos said Saturday that he was proud of the race he ran, even when it got ugly. The crowd at his watch party even booed Jones when her face came on the TV screen after early results were announced. 'I think that my team did a great job. I think we ran an excellent campaign,' said Pablos, who vowed to continue looking for ways to serve the community. 'What we did is we just laid everything out for everybody to look at and consider.' Jones, whose family grew up leaning on housing vouchers and other forms of government support, crafted a campaign around protecting San Antonio's most vulnerable residents — particularly in times of political uncertainty at the state and federal levels. She was one of the most vocal critics of the city's plans for a roughly $4 billion downtown development project and NBA arena for the San Antonio Spurs known as Project Marvel early in the race, saying she instead wanted to focus city resources on expanded Pre-K programs, workforce development and affordable housing. It was a major contrast to Pablos, a former San Antonio Hispanic Chamber chair, who vowed to focus on bringing major corporations to San Antonio, and led even some left-leaning members of the business community to view her with uncertainty. A surprising number of progressive elected officials either stayed out of the runoff entirely or publicly backed Pablos. Jones seemed undeterred by that dynamic, saying often on the campaign trail that her own approach was rooted in personal experience with leaders who only listen to the privileged few. She joined the military under Don't Ask Don't Tell more than two decades ago at Boston University, and will now be the city's first mayor from the LGBTQ community. 'That experience [of Don't Ask Don't Tell] showed me the importance of when you are in leadership, always having the humility to ask, 'Who am I not hearing from? And why am I not hearing from them?' Jones said at a recent San Antonio Report debate. Jones pointed to San Antonio's ongoing struggle with poverty — despite major investments over many years to try to change that reputation. 'We've had, I think, too many leaders listening to too small a part of our community.' Big news: 20 more speakers join the TribFest lineup! New additions include Margaret Spellings, former U.S. secretary of education and CEO of the Bipartisan Policy Center; Michael Curry, former presiding bishop and primate of The Episcopal Church; Beto O'Rourke, former U.S. Representative, D-El Paso; Joe Lonsdale, entrepreneur, founder and managing partner at 8VC; and Katie Phang, journalist and trial lawyer. Get tickets. TribFest 2025 is presented by JPMorganChase.

Democrats fend off GOP in San Antonio mayor runoff election
Democrats fend off GOP in San Antonio mayor runoff election

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Democrats fend off GOP in San Antonio mayor runoff election

Former Biden administration official Gina Ortiz Jones has won a runoff election in San Antonio's mayoral race, fending off a Republican opponent that the GOP hoped could pull off an upset, Decision Desk HQ projects. Jones defeated former Texas Secretary of State Rolando Pablos in an officially nonpartisan election that still in practice played out as a partisan election as Jones is a registered Democrat and Pablos is a registered Republican. The two candidates had advanced from the first round of the election in which many competed on the same ballot. Since no candidate received a majority of the vote in that round last month, the top two performing candidates advanced to face each other in the runoff. The city of San Antonio hasn't elected a Republican mayor in more than 20 years, and the past two elections for outgoing Mayor Ron Nirenberg, who has served since 2017, haven't been close. Nirenberg is term-limited from running again after serving four two-year terms. But Republicans had hope that they could notch a win with Pablos, who served as secretary of state for about two years under Gov. Greg Abbott (R). The GOP made some gains in the city in November after three presidential races in a row in which the city swung toward Democrats, though former Vice President Harris still comfortably won the area. Pablos also had a significant fundraising advantage, outraising Jones by a margin of 1.5 to 1, while outside spending from PACs contributed more than triple the amount in favor of Pablos compared to Jones, according to DDHQ. That includes a PAC with ties to Abbott and San Antonio's police union, The Texas Tribune reported. Pablos also picked up an endorsement from the editorial board of the San Antonio Express-News, uncommon for a Republican. But Jones was still the favorite in the Democratic-leaning city, even despite the gains that President Trump and the GOP has made with Hispanic voters recently. She finished first in the first round of voting in May, receiving 27.2 percent of the vote in a crowded field to Pablos's 16.6 percent. Jones previously served as undersecretary of the Air Force during the Biden administration from 2021 to 2023. Before that, she was the Democratic nominee for the House seat in Texas's 23rd Congressional District in 2018 and 2020, losing narrowly both times. She will be San Antonio's third female mayor and the first person to serve a four-year term after voters in the city approved a measure in November extending the mayor's term from two years to four. She will also be the city's first openly lesbian mayor. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store