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Musk takes hammer to Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' as he makes dire DOGE prediction after White House exit

Musk takes hammer to Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' as he makes dire DOGE prediction after White House exit

Daily Mail​2 days ago

Elon Musk says most of the savings made by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) will be wiped out within a year by President Donald Trump 's freshly unveiled 'big, beautiful bill.'
Musk made the astounding comments during a blistering interview aired on Sunday despite initially declaring he only wanted to avoid discussing 'presidential policy' and stick to 'spaceships'.
In a previously released clip last week, Musk took aim at Trump's bill saying that he didn't think it could be both big and beautiful - just one or the other.
Speaking just days after officially leaving his advisory post, Musk warned that Trump's sweeping legislation would quickly obliterate the fiscal reforms DOGE had fought for.
'I was, like, disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, doesn't decrease it, and undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,' Musk told CBS Sunday Morning.
The 'big, beautiful bill,' hailed by Trump as the keystone of his second-term agenda, proposes $5 trillion in tax cuts alongside aggressive new spending hikes, lifting the debt ceiling by more than $4 trillion over two years.
Despite its ambitions, reshaping tax law, overhauling immigration policy, and slashing Medicaid benefits in the future, Musk believes the bill is fundamentally at odds with the hard choices DOGE made to streamline government.
'I actually thought that, when this "big, beautiful bill" came along, it'd be like, everything he's done on DOGE gets wiped out in the first year,' CBS reporter David Pogue said bluntly.
'I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful... but I don't know if it could be both. My personal opinion,' Musk laughed.
It was a rare, public rebuke of Trump from Musk - a man once dubbed the president's 'first buddy' and hailed on the campaign trail as a 'truly incredible guy' by Trump himself.
Musk spent $288 million supporting Trump's election and became a fixture at the White House, invited into Cabinet meetings and leading the charge to slash federal bureaucracy with DOGE's chainsaw-wielding fervor.
But after months of political warfare, Musk's relationship with Washington, and with Trump, has cooled.
Lawsuits and protests coupled with a 71 percent crash in Tesla profits followed DOGE's drastic cuts which saw 250,000 federal workers either fired or bought out across every federal department.
Musk saw grants slashed and staffing culled at environmental agencies including the EPA and NOAA, despite decades of warning about the risks of climate change.
Musk's personal net worth shrank by $100 billion, whilst government workers blamed DOGE for everything from Social Security delays to shuttered national parks.
'It's a bit unfair because DOGE became the whipping boy for everything,' Musk said. 'If there was some cut, real or imagined, everyone would blame DOGE.
'I've had people think that, like, somehow, DOGE is going to stop them from getting their Social Security check, which is completely untrue,' he went on.
'We became essentially the DOGE boogeyman, where any cut anywhere would be ascribed to DOGE,' he said.
Originally touting a $2 trillion savings goal, Musk later revised his target to $1 trillion.
In the end, Musk claims DOGE managed to slash an estimated $175 billion before his departure - a far cry from his lofty ambitions.
Yet now, with Trump's bill promising $3.8 trillion in added debt over the next decade, Musk believes even those savings would essentially be rendered meaningless.
'We do expect, over time, to achieve a trillion,' Musk explained on Friday during his farewell press conference, but it was also clear he knew that a huge wave of fresh spending would overwhelm any of DOGE's victories.
Musk's departure came after CBS previewed the interview in which he criticized the bill in a clip that quickly went viral and reached the Oval Office within hours.
The timing was no coincidence: Musk's formal 130-day stint as a 'Special Government Employee' was over - yet until that moment, Musk seemed to imply that he would continue contributing to White House efforts part-time.
At an Oval Office farewell event on Friday, both men tried to downplay the rupture.
Trump presented Musk with a ceremonial gold key, praising him as a 'very special person.'
'Elon's really not leaving,' Trump said. 'He's going to be back and forth, I think. I have a feeling.'
'DOGE is gonna continue, just as a way of life,' Musk told CBS. 'I will have some participation in that, but as I've said publicly, my focus has to be on the companies at this point.'
Sporting a noticeable black eye that he claimed to have received from a playful punch by his son 'Little X' he also made sure to praise the president one last time.
'The DOGE team is doing an incredible job. They're going to continue doing an incredible job, and I will continue to be visiting here and be a friend and advisor to the president,' Musk said.
Despite the highly choreographed moment, there still appeared to be some tension.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who reportedly clashed with Musk behind closed doors, stood stone-faced at the event.
Trump wistfully that both him and Musk had endured 'slings and arrows'. He described Musk as someone he would keep close.
'Many of the things that we're working on right now, we're going to have to remember Elon as we find them,' Trump said.
Following the latest bill announcement, Musk appears to be distancing himself from the administration's latest fiscal ambitions.
'My frank opinion of the government is that it's just like the DMV that got big, okay?' Musk told CBS.
'When you say, "Let's have the government do something," you should think: "Do you want the DMV to do it?"
'It's not like I agree with everything the administration does. But we have differences of opinion. There are things that I don't entirely agree with. But it's difficult for me to bring that up in an interview because then it creates a bone of contention,' Musk explained.
'So then, I'm a little stuck in a bind, where I'm like, well, I don't want to, you know, speak up against the administration, but I also don't want to take responsibility for everything this administration's doing.'
Following the CBS interview, Musk returned to SpaceX's Texas headquarters, where he attended the ninth test launch of Starship.
As the massive rocket spiraled out of control and disintegrated upon re-entry, some observers couldn't help but note the symbolism.

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Musk sends Republicans into chaos as he shreds Trump's ‘big beautiful bill' — ‘He doesn't get to vote'
Musk sends Republicans into chaos as he shreds Trump's ‘big beautiful bill' — ‘He doesn't get to vote'

The Independent

time15 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Musk sends Republicans into chaos as he shreds Trump's ‘big beautiful bill' — ‘He doesn't get to vote'

Senate Republicans were in their luncheon as they begin the process to take up President Donald Trump's ' One Big, Beautiful Bill ' when Elon Musk blasted the legislation as an ' outrageous, pork-filled, disgusting abomination.' version of the massive domestic legislation bill that includes extending the 2017 tax cuts Trump signed, beefed up spending at the U.S.-Mexico border and oil drilling as well as massive changes to the social safety net in the United States. But just before Senate Majority Leader John Thune and the rest Republican leadership were about to begin their press conference, Musk, the just-departed head of Trump's Department of Government Efficiency, raged against the bill on X. 'I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore,' he posted. 'This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it.' Some Republicans sought to ignore it. Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa — who recently came under criticism for dismissing constituents concerned over Medicaid cuts at a local town hall with her response, ' Well, we're all going to die ' — brushed off a question from The Independent as she exited the Capitol and got into her car. Sen. Rick Scott said he had not read the Musk tweet, a common refrain from politicians not wishing to discuss a hot topic. When The Independent offered to show it to him, he brushed it off. 'I want to get the tax cuts permanent, the border money, the military, but we've got to get spending under control,' Scott, an ally of Trump, told The Independent. 'So I'm going to continue to work to bring down the deficit, to hopefully balance the budget the next three years.' Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin has in the past called for steeper cuts in the bill and praised Musk's comments, saying it 'bolsters' the points he made. "The only way I know how to do this is lay out the facts and figures and win the argument," Johnson told The Independent. Others, such as Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Katie Britt of Alabama, both members of the Senate Appropriations Committee, told The Independent they had not seen the tweet. Alabama's other Republican senator — Tommy Tuberville, a staunch ally of Trump — brushed off Musk's criticism. 'I ain't got any thoughts on that,' Tuberville said of the Musk posting. 'We got a lot of work to do. He doesn't get to vote.' House Speaker Mike Johnson, who spent weeks corralling various factions within the House GOP conference before he passed it in the wee hours of the morning last month before the House broke for recess, pushed back on Musk's criticism. 'It's very disappointing,' Johnson told reporters. 'With all due respect, my friend Elon is terribly wrong about the One Big, Beautiful Bill.' Other Republican senators made jokes about Musk's remarks. 'Does that mean he likes it?' Sen. Bernie Moreno of Ohio told The Independent. 'I think he's probably buying into the CBO scoring model, but look, ultimately, we haven't even gotten the bill yet right so we're gonna make it better.' The Congressional Budget Office, the nonpartisan body in Congress that scores how much legislation costs, estimated that extending the tax cuts in the bill would raise the debt by $3.8 trillion. But Republicans have pushed back on the estimate. Republicans have only 53 Senate seats, which is below the 60-seat threshold needed to overcome a filibuster. As a result, they hope to pass the bill through a process reconciliation, which allows them to pass legislation with a simple majority as long it relates to the budget. Musk recently exited the Trump administration after a months-long tenure at DOGE, where he slashed federal spending at numerous government agencies, including the US Agency for International Development. Other Republicans said they would work to improve the bill. 'He's certainly entitled his opinion,' Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, who faces a tough primary challenge in Texas. 'And we're trying to make the bill better.' The bill is not the first time that Musk has wielded his significant following on X, the site then-known as Twitter that he purchased in 2022, to intervene in congressional affairs. In late 2024, he killed a bipartisan spending deal to keep the government open and said that the government should remain closed until Trump's swearing in. Musk pledged he would challenge any Republicans who voted for the bill. 'In November next year, we fire all politicians who betrayed the American people,' he said. Even Republicans who criticized the bill seemed to balk at Musk's intervention. When Musk tweeted 'Congress is making America bankrupt,' Paul tweeted 'Some of us are trying to stop that.' But when The Independent asked if Paul had seen Musk's first tweet, he said 'I haven't seen it' as he exited and got into an elevator.

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