
Republicans are downplaying concerns that the feud between President Trump and Elon Musk will hamper the party’s chances of defending their majorities in the House and the Senate next year.
In the midst of the escalating war of words on Thursday, Musk claimed Trump would not have won the White House without him last year and floated the idea of launching a third party. Musk has also threatened to use his financial war chest and platform to challenge Republicans backing Trump’s legislative agenda.
However, many Republicans say Trump’s influence within the party is strong enough to withstand any kind of political challenge from Musk. Others even say they still think Musk is a part of their team.
“I think if you’re a Republican in a primary and you have Trump’s support and Elon’s opposition, you’re going to be okay,” said Rep. Nick LaLota (R-N.Y.), adding that the president would eclipse Musk “by a 10 or 100-fold.”
Musk notably took credit for Trump’s White House during his keyboard war with Trump on Thursday, claiming Democrats would control the House and hold a 51 to 49 majority in the Senate.
The billionaire was the single largest donor in the 2024 general election, spending nearly $300 million. Musk’s political action committee, America PAC, supported Trump and a number of Republicans running in key congressional races.
The PAC has remained active during Trump’s second administration, spending over $18 million in a closely watched race for a Wisconsin Supreme Court seat. The group has also promoted Trump’s work this cycle, releasing its first television ad following Trump’s joint address to Congress earlier this year.
But despite the resources poured into Wisconsin, the Democratic-backed candidate won the court seat in what was described by critics as an embarrassment for Musk. America PAC spent millions in 18 competitive House races. Ten of the PAC’s backed GOP House candidates won their elections, while the other 8 lost.
“America PAC spent $20 million on House races but none of that was super consequential— none of it was on TV, just digital and canvassing,” said one national Republican operative, who noted Musk was still on the GOP “team.”
Speaker Mike Johnson called Musk “a big contributor in the last election” in an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Friday, but said it was ultimately “a whole team effort.”
“I mean, President Trump is the most consequential political figure of his generation, of modern American history. He is the one responsible for that,” Johnson said. “But we all worked hard. We delivered the House majority. I traveled the country nonstop. I did over 360 campaign events in 250 cities and 40 states, and I logged enough miles last year to circle the globe five and a half times. I mean, I contributed to it as well. All of our House Republicans did.”
Democrats have spent much of the first half of this year making Musk a boogeyman of sorts, painting him as out of touch with most Americans. The feud between Trump and Musk does not appear to be changing that strategy going into the midterms.
“Democrats are going to win by highlighting the fact that Republicans are failing at lowering costs because they are too busy pushing tax breaks for the ultra-wealthy and big corporations, while making the rest of us pay for them,” said Viet Shelton, a spokesperson for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. “Elon is, and forever will be, an instantly-recognizable manifestation of the fact that House Republicans don’t work for the American people, they work for the billionaires.”
Some Republicans remain weary of Musk, noting his massive online following that is made up of over 220 million followers on his platform X. Musk’s views on the debt are widely shared by fiscally conservative voters.
“If Musk makes the national debt and deficit his defining issue and starts backing candidates who share that focus, it could create a real fracture inside the GOP. Trump’s economic agenda has never been about fiscal restraint,” said a former White House communications aide who worked in the first Trump administration.
“If Musk begins channeling serious money into candidates who want to draw a hard line on spending and debt, you could see a Freedom Caucus 2.0 emerge — this time with financial firepower and a mandate to push back on Trump and Speaker Johnson’s spending ambitions,” the aide said.
But Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.), a member of the House Freedom Caucus, threw cold water on the notion that the feud could jeopardize Republicans in the midterms.
“No, I don’t think so. Now everybody’s got to decide that. We all have one vote and we’ll see,” Norman told The Hill. “But I hope he keeps doing what he’s doing and the team of people he put together, I want to do it statewide. Each state, I would do just what he’s done with the federal government,” he added, referring to Musk’s leadership at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
DOGE Subcommittee Chair Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) noted the importance of all of Trump’s 2024 donors and supporters, including Musk, but suggested the two take their feud offline.
“I think every single American that voted for us deserves credit and Elon Musk is one vote,” Greene told reporters. “I’ve said that every single vote and every single donor matters whether they’ve donated a dollar or hundreds of millions of dollars.”
“I don’t think lashing out on the internet is the way to handle any kind of disagreement, especially when you have each other’s cell phones,” she said.
–Alex Gangitano and Emily Brooks contributed.