
President Trump has a Tesla heĀ would like to sell to you.Ā
That is only a minor consequence of the spectacular fallout between Donald Trump and Elon Musk in recent weeks. Their exchanges on their respective social media platforms certainly did not lack entertainment value.
Last week, there were signs of reconciliation, with Musk saying, āI regret some of my posts about PresidentĀ @realDonaldTrumpĀ last week. They went too far.ā But that was after much damage had been done.Ā
Among the bitter recriminations was MuskāsĀ endorsementĀ of Trumpās impeachment and his replacement with Vice President JD Vance.Ā
HeĀ then wroteĀ that it was ātime to drop the really big bomb. @realDonald Trump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public. Have a nice day, DJT.ā Musk laterĀ deleted this tweetĀ and put out his remorseful statement.Ā
Trump, who never ignores an insult, quicklyĀ responded in kind: āThe easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elonās Governmental Subsidies and Contracts.ā Trumpās threat was no idle one. The Washington Post estimates that Muskās business empire is built on a staggeringĀ $38 billionĀ in federal contracts.Ā Ā
Still, the threat to his business empire caused Musk in the moment to take the gloves off. Writing on his social media platform X, Musk accused Trump of ingratitude,Ā claiming: āWithout me, Trump would have lost the election. Democrats would control the House, and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate.āĀ Ā
It was Muskās opposition to Trumpās ābig, beautifulā tax bill that had sparked his initial outburst. āI just canāt stand it anymore,ā MuskĀ wroteĀ to his 220 million followers on X. āThis 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.āĀ
It wasnāt just theĀ projected $2.4 trillion deficitsĀ that Trumpās legislation would create that angered Musk. It was also Trump taking direct aim at one of Muskās most prized companies, Tesla, byĀ eliminating the tax creditsĀ contained in Joe BidenāsĀ Inflation Reduction ActĀ that reduced the cost of these expensive vehicles.Ā
But the Trump-Musk feud represents something more than pettiness between two bilious billionaires with gigantic egos. Today, Trump, Musk, the Republican Party and even Trumpās supporters find themselves locked in an elaborate prison which each has helped construct.Ā Ā
Deconstructing this prison would be an impossible task. For example, any tearing apart of Muskās intertwining web of financial and security relationships with federal agencies poses its own security risks.Ā
SpaceX, to take one example,Ā received $3.8 billion in federal contracts in 2024. Ending that relationship would jeopardize the Pentagonās ability to conduct classified missions and provide support for NASAās astronauts.Ā
Musk also has his own hold on the Republican Party. At one point, he threatened to create and fund a third party, which he dubbed āAmericaās Party,ā that he claimed would ārepresent 80 percent in the middle.ā For Republicans, any third-party effort sponsored by Musk could spell the difference between victory and defeat.Ā Ā
But Musk represents not merely a threat to Trump but to the long-term interests of the Republican Party. AsĀ Musk wrote on X: āSome food for thought: Trump has 3.5 years left as President, but I will be around for 40+ years.āĀ
For his part, Trump countered that any funds Musk might contribute to Democratic candidates would have āserious consequences.ā Still, the threat remains.Ā
The feud also highlights the imprisonment in which congressional Republicans find themselves. While Musk isĀ highly dislikedĀ by the general public,Ā substantial majorities of Republican votersĀ approve ofĀ bothĀ men.Ā Not surprisingly, Republicans called for a truce. Rep. Beth Van Duyne (R-Texas)Ā posted: āWE ARE STRONGER TOGETHER!! CEASE FIRE FOR GODāS SAKE.ā Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas)Ā likened the situation to a bitter divorceĀ āwhere youāre just saying, āI really wish mommy and daddy would stop screaming.āāĀ
Ironically, Trump finds himself locked in his own form of self-imposed imprisonment. While Trumpās core supporters share his grievances, no deviation can be tolerated.Ā
For example, when Trump bragged in 2020 that his Operation Warp Speed produced a āmiracleā with the development of the COVID-19 vaccine, Trump urged his supporters to get it.Ā Ā
But Trumpās supporters resisted. In 2021,Ā Trump was booedĀ (in Alabama of all places) when he urged his rallygoers to become inoculated. By 2024, Trump opposed virtually all vaccine mandates, telling his incoming Health and Human Services Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., to āgo wildā on health, a comment sure to please his most devoted supporters.Ā Ā
The Republican Partyās acceptance of the alternative universe created for it by Trump means that any chance of executing a jail break is unlikely to succeed. Discomfort with the facts and adherence to founding principles are to be avoided at all costs.Ā
In 1962,Ā JohnĀ F. Kennedy highlighted our uneasiness with the truth. Addressing the graduates of Yale University,Ā Kennedy said: āThe great enemy of truth is very often not the lie ā deliberate, contrived and dishonest ā but the myth, persistent, persuasive and unrealistic.āĀ
He continued: āToo often we hold fast to the cliches of our forebears. We subject all facts to a prefabricated set of interpretations. We enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.ā
Trump and his acolytes have constructed a comfortable imprisonment.Ā Any discomfort created by an electoral loss is comforted by a belief that elections are stolen. The discomfort of nominating a convicted felon is comforted by a belief that the judicial or prosecutorial system is controlled by a corrupt ādeep state.ā
Any discomfort of losing the popular vote is comforted by an unwieldy electoral college that skews in the Republican Partyās favor. And any discomfort elected Republicans show toward Trump in private is comforted by their continued hold on power.Ā Ā
JohnĀ KennethĀ White is a professor emeritus at the Catholic University of America. His latest book is titled āGrand Old Unraveling: The Republican Party, Donald Trump, and the Rise of Authoritarianism.āĀ
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