Elon Musk blasts Biden administration, Democrats on Twitter over ‘hate,’ sidelining of Tesla

Elon Musk blasts Biden administration, Democrats on Twitter over ‘hate,’ sidelining of Tesla


Tesla CEO Elon Musk on Friday blasted the Biden administration and Democrats on Twitter, as the world’s richest man doubled down on his vow to vote for Republicans.

Musk in a tweet accused the Biden administration of doing “everything it can to sideline” and ignore Tesla, despite its dominance in the electric vehicle industry.

Musk, who is making an increasingly fraught attempt to buy Twitter for $44 billion, suggested Thursday that Democrats would target him with a smear campaign after he announced that he would vote for GOP candidates.

“In the past I voted Democrat, because they were (mostly) the kindness party. But they have become the party of division & hate, so I can no longer support them and will vote Republican,” Musk tweeted Thursday.

“Now, watch their dirty tricks campaign against me unfold …,” he wrote, ending the tweet with a “popcorn” emoji.

Hours later Thursday, Business Insider published a bombshell report detailing allegations that Musk exposed his genitals to a private jet flight attendant as he asked her for a full body massage on a SpaceX flight to London. The report said he offered to buy her a horse for her acquiescence to his purported sexual requests.

Musk denied the woman’s claims. Insider reported that they were detailed in a written declaration from a friend of hers, submitted to bolster a complaint the woman made to SpaceX’s human resources department.

But neither Musk nor SpaceX have denied Business Insider’s report that the aerospace firm he founded and runs paid the woman $250,000 in severance in exchange for her silence after she complained about his alleged conduct.

Musk in a tweet wrote, “The attacks against me should be viewed through a political lens – this is their standard (despicable) playbook – but nothing will deter me from fighting for a good future and your right to free speech.”

On Thursday, after Musk tweeted that he expected a “dirty tricks campaign against me” following his announcement that he would vote Republican, the Democratic podcaster Jon Favreau fired back at Musk.

“Hey man, if you want to support a bunch of electric vehicle-hating climate deniers, that’s on you,” tweeted Favreau, who was a speechwriter to President Barack Obama.

“Not sure that it helps the cause that you and your team have dedicated much of your lives to, but I guess you’ll get some attention on Twitter, so there’s that!” Favreau wrote.

Musk replied Friday, writing, “Hi Jon! You’re a good dude, but obv die-hard Dem, so have to support the party, but this Adminstration has done everything it can to sideline & ignore Tesla, even though we have made twice as many EVs as rest of US industry combined.”

Earlier this week at the All In Summit in Miami, Musk said he would classify himself “as a moderate, neither Republican or Democrat,” who “overwhelmingly” voted for Democrats in the past.

“I might never have voted Republican. Now, this election? I will,” Musk said at the event.

“The Democratic Party is overly controlled by the unions and the trial lawyers, particularly the class-action lawyers,” he said.

Musk’s beef with the Biden administration goes back to August of last year. He was not invited to President Joe Biden’s signing ceremony for an executive order that called on automakers to sell more electric vehicles — but executives from General Motors, Ford and Chrysler were.

“Yeah, seems odd that Tesla wasn’t invited,” Musk tweeted.

It was reported in February that Biden had no immediate plans to invite Musk to White House meetings with corporate leaders.

Musk told CNBC in emails that same month that Biden was ignoring Tesla in favor of giving attention to legacy automakers.

“The notion of a feud is not quite right. Biden has pointedly ignored Tesla at every turn and falsely stated to the public that GM leads the electric car industry, when in fact Tesla produced over 300,000 electric vehicles last quarter and GM produced 26,” Musk said in the email at the time.

Last month, Musk, GM CEO Mary Barra and other top auto executives met with senior Biden administration officials about electric vehicle charging stations.

— Additional reporting by Lora Kolodny and Brian Schwartz



Source

Paramount earnings, revenue beat expectations as streaming business offers a boost
Business

Paramount earnings, revenue beat expectations as streaming business offers a boost

An aerial view of the Paramount logo on the water tower at Paramount Studios on Feb. 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. Justin Sullivan | Getty Images Paramount Skydance topped Wall Street’s revenue and earnings estimates for the first quarter on Monday, as the media company got a boost from its streaming and film businesses. The […]

Read More
How Chinese carmaker Geely put roots in the U.S.
Business

How Chinese carmaker Geely put roots in the U.S.

Politicians on both sides of the aisle want to block Chinese vehicles from the United States. But over 100 Chinese automakers, auto tech companies, and parts suppliers already have a presence in the U.S., according to a survey done by Dunne Insights, a consultancy that focuses on electric vehicles and autonomous markets. Despite the United States […]

Read More
Anthropic teams with Goldman, Blackstone and others on .5 billion AI venture targeting PE-owned firms
Business

Anthropic teams with Goldman, Blackstone and others on $1.5 billion AI venture targeting PE-owned firms

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei looks on after a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron during the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi on February 19, 2026. Ludovic Marin | Afp | Getty Images Anthropic said Monday it is partnering with private equity giants Goldman Sachs and Blackstone to launch a $1.5 billion firm aimed at […]

Read More