
Trump attacks Musk as public feud escalates over tax bill
US President Donald Trump has lashed out against Elon Musk, saying he was "disappointed" by the billionaire's public opposition to the sweeping tax-cut and spending bill that is at the heart of Mr Trump's agenda.
"Look, Elon and I had a great relationship. I don't know if we will anymore," Mr Trump said in the Oval Office.
"He said the most beautiful things about me, and he hasn't said bad about me personally, but I'm sure that'll be next. But I'm, I'm very disappointed in Elon. I've helped Elon a lot," he said.
President Trump also asserted that Mr Musk's days of blistering attacks on the bill were motivated by the proposed elimination of consumer tax credits for electric vehicles.
Mr Musk, the CEO of electric vehicle maker Tesla, has said he opposes the bill because it will increase federal deficits.
Mr Trump suggested that Elon Musk, who received a praise-filled sendoff from the President last week after overseeing his federal bureaucracy cost-cutting campaign, was upset because he missed working for Mr Trump.
"He's not the first," President Trump said. "People leave my administration ... then at some point they miss it so badly, and some of them embrace it and some of them actually become hostile," he added.
As Mr Trump was speaking, Elon Musk wrote on X, "Slim Beautiful Bill for the win," a reference to the bill's official title, the "Big Beautiful Bill Act".
Mr Musk followed that up with another post, saying he was fine with the cuts to electric vehicle credits as long as Republicans removed what he called a "mountain of disgusting pork" in wasteful spending from the bill.
He also said the US President would have lost the election without his support.
"Without me, Trump would have lost the election," Mr Musk said on X. "Such ingratitude," he added.
Mr Musk came into the government with brash plans to cut $2 trillion out of the federal budget.
He left last week having achieved far less than that, having cut about half of 1% of total spending.
Mr Musk has been a powerful Trump ally, spending nearly $300 million to boost Republicans in the 2024 election and then overseeing President Trump's Department of Government Efficiency.
His work eliminating thousands of federal jobs and cutting billions of dollars in foreign aid and other programmes caused disruption across federal agencies while prompting widespread protests at Tesla outlets in the US and Europe.
Shares of Tesla extended losses after President Trump's criticism of Mr Musk.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
The Irish Independent's View: As Trump and Musk scrap, US voters could be hit by the fallout
Sceptics had long believed this union was more probably made in the darkest reaches of the nether world and would be happy to see it returned to its hottest corner. By their logic, no single universe could possibly contain two such colossal egos. Perhaps it is a back-handed compliment to Mr Musk that the ending of his 'First Buddy' status was celebrated with equal glee by the MAGA faithful and Democratic die-hards alike. What is clear is that when the planet's richest man falls out with its most powerful, there will be consequences. If Mr Musk thought the hundreds of millions he had given the president would spare him from his master's whims, he could not have been more wrong. In Trumpworld there can be only one emperor. The South African-born billionaire may have been cast into the void, but as owner of X — and Tesla, Space-X, Starlink and more — he makes for a dangerous adversary. The fallout from putting his nose out of joint could literally have been out of this world. 'In light of the president's statement about cancellation of my government contracts, SpaceX will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately,' Mr Musk said. Told that such a move would 'both end the International Space Station and simultaneously provide no way to safely de-orbit it', he rowed back. Mr Musk's conjuring up of the spectre of Jeffrey Epstein and the president's friendship with the convicted paedophile may yet be explosive Clearly, when two stars of the ultra-wealthy firmament collide, mere mortals need to be wary. The dispute could be destabilising, with far-reaching political and economic implications. Mr Musk's conjuring up of the spectre of Jeffrey Epstein and the president's friendship with the convicted paedophile may yet be explosive. US author Mark Twain understood the power of the press when he warned: 'Never quarrel with a man who buys ink by the barrel.' The advice is even more pertinent when it comes to tramping on the toes of a tech giant who also owns the planet's most influential media platform. Of course, the real concern is for the interests of voters who could be caught up in the havoc wreaked by such a titanic clash. ADVERTISEMENT The little guy rarely does well when the irresistible force meets the immoveable object; it did not take long for the mutual congratulations after the so-called 'Dogefather' stepped down to turn caustic. Mr Musk has told Republicans that Mr Trump will be gone in the next few years, while he will be strutting his stuff for the 'next 40'. The celebrity divorce has already reduced Mr Musk's estimated $388bn (€340bn) fortune by $36.6bn. It was his dismissal of Mr Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' as an 'abomination' that caused the lightning storm. With US national debt at $36.22tn, someone needed to say something. The two billionaires will recover from their respective sweet sorrows: the hope is that the parting will not prove too bitter for American taxpayers.


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Philip Bump: Elon Musk has already lost the war as Republicans rally behind Donald Trump
No one really knows where the billionaire and the president will go from here ©Washington Post There is only one person who is unquestionably able to both maintain a high level of public visibility and stay on president Donald Trump's good side. That person is Donald Trump. Everyone else who sidles up to him suffers from the deficit that they are not Trump himself. They therefore risk discovering that Trump has suddenly turned against them, bringing his fervent base of support – tens of millions of Americans strong – with him. Options from that point are limited: obsequious efforts at reintegration with the president or lining up for one of the modest but endless slots reserved in the public conversation for Trump's former allies.


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Letters: Elon Musk's break with Donald Trump may offer opportunities to Ireland and rest of the EU
This is no ordinary falling-out. For once, Mr Trump is confronting a rival with genuine leverage – technological, communicative, financial and, perhaps, psychological. The implications could extend far beyond American shores. If this rupture holds, I could see Mr Musk pivoting towards Brussels, offering the EU and countries like Ireland his full innovation portfolio – satellites, electric vehicles, AI – at preferential rates. He may well find European regulators less volatile than a president nursing a grudge. Enda Cullen, Tullysaran Road, Armagh Tesla boss made a mistake trusting president, but he will be formidable enemy Monica Hesse doesn't hold back on the character of billionaire Elon Musk ( 'Good riddance to Musk, who did not need to do any of this', Irish Independent, June 4). But that's what drives billionaires, that's how they get there. Sitting back is not within Musk's DNA. While it is hard to have any sympathy for a billionaire who gets fired, he was naive to trust Trump. Perhaps if nothing else, Musk will be a man scorned and a formidable enemy for President Trump. In that his destructive stint into politics may prove invaluable and electrifying to America and democracy at large. Aidan Roddy, Cabinteely, Dublin 18 Billionaire's attack could turn Republicans against their leader and his bill For months, US president Donald Trump has been heralding his 'big, beautiful' spending bill as being a key piece of his agenda, containing tax cuts for the rich and benefits cuts for the vulnerable. We now know that this will also add trillions to America's debt, to the point that some are now sounding the alarm, warning of a 'debt bomb' about to hit the US economy. What the White House didn't bet on was that one of those leading critics would be Elon Musk, who has turned fire on his former boss in spectacular fashion, calling the legislation a 'disgusting abomination' and ominously warning US senators that voters will fire those politicians who 'betray America'. I am not an advocate of Musk but on this one , I believe that he's not wrong. It leaves me wondering: will the words of Musk spook Republicans into defying Donald Trump? I am also curious as to how the president will react to Musk's missives. John O'Brien, Clonmel, Co Tipperary ADVERTISEMENT Learn more Israel will stop at nothing in its war on Gaza, so it's time for Ireland cut all ties The US representative to the UN, Dorothy Camille Shea, repeated Washington's message as part of the veto of a resolution calling for an unconditional ceasefire in Gaza, that Israel has the 'right to defend itself'. Unsurprisingly, there was no mention of the right to life for Palestinians. This was the latest example of the United States' unwavering support of Israel's annihilation of Gaza. Israel's UN representative, Danny Danon, eerily replied to the veto: 'Don't waste more of your time.' He added that no resolution, no vote, 'will stand in our way'. If the UN can't put a stop to the carnage, then it falls to small nations such as our own to take a stand, and at least to end our own complicity. The Irish Government must, like TCD, cut all ties with Israel. It must enact the Occupied Territories Bill, enact the Arms Embargo Bill, and stop the Central Bank regulating Israeli war bonds. After 20 months, 56,000 Palestinians are dead. How many more need to die before our Government honours its obligations as a signatory to the Genocide Convention? Aisling Brady, Drumcondra, Dublin 9 Thunberg's voyage to Palestine offers haunting echoes of famine ship Kudos to Martina Devlin for highlighting the humanitarian ship Madleen on its way across the Mediterranean with vital food, medicine and other essential supplies ('Greta Thunberg's aid ship for Gaza won't get through – but that doesn't make it a failure', Irish Independent, June 6). Readers may recall the story of the Jeanie Johnston, now parked on Dublin's Custom House Quay and which began its journey in Blennerville, just outside of Tralee. This replica 'famine ship' tells the unique story of Ireland's past and the thousands of Irish people who crossed the Atlantic to escape starvation and destitution. Not one soul was lost on the original ship, which crossed the ocean dozens of times. Former RTÉ journalist Fintan Drury, whose new, deeply researched book on what is happening in Gaza, Catastrophe, asks: 'Where is the outrage?' He convincingly argues that what is now being perpetrated on a defenceless people did not begin on October 7, 2023, but rather eight decades earlier ('Author hoping to convert Kerry readers not convinced of Palestinian cause at talk in Listowel', The Kerryman and Irish Independent, May 28) The Madleen ship may be turned away by Israel but world is watching as Netanyahu and co deliberately use starvation as a shocking and cowardly tactic in their latest attempt to suppress an indigenous race. Tom McElligott, Listowel, Co Kerry Income tax may be deeply unfair, but its burden should fall evenly on us all The news that so many workers are exempt from income tax in one way or another presents a real moral dilemma (Irish Independent, June 5). On the one hand, income tax is a 200-year-old hangover from the Napoleonic wars; an immoral way for the State to monetise our waking hours that has no place in a free and democratic society in which the particularly altruistic can donate what they please to the Exchequer. As such, bully for those who don't have to pay it, whatever the reason. On the other hand, if the blight of income tax is to exist, it should be applied evenly, if for no other reason than to reduce the burden it places on those of us who do have to pay it. In that sense, the workers who don't pay should have to, with a view to reducing what is due from the rest of us. Killian Foley-Walsh, Kilkenny city