Free Trial

DOGE eats Musk? Billionaire entrepreneur's companies at risk as he reignites feud with Trump

Elon Musk asiste a una conferencia de prensa con el presidente Donald Trump en el Despacho Oval de la Casa Blanca, el 30 de mayo de 2025, en Washington. (AP Foto/Evan Vucci, Archivo)

Key Points

  • Musk criticized the bipartisan “big bill” as political suicide for the Republican Party, threatened to unseat lawmakers who support it and promised to form the America Party if it passes.
  • His X posts about ousting congressmen (viewed 26 million times) and creating the America Party (32 million views) have gone viral, underscoring his political influence.
  • Trump fired back on Truth Social, mocking Musk’s electric vehicle subsidies and mandates, claiming Tesla would collapse without federal support and that the U.S. could save a “FORTUNE” by halting his rockets, satellites and EV production.
  • The President also warned Musk he could lose far more than subsidies and cautioned that his former Department of Government Efficiency (“DOGE”) initiative might “turn around and eat” him.
  • Interested in ? Here are five stocks we like better.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Elon Musk may find out what happens when DOGE bites man.

The billionaire SpaceX, Tesla and X owner who catapulted his zealous embrace of President Donald Trump into a powerful position, slashing government spending, now risks sweeping cuts to his own bottom line after resuming the feud that led to their very public bitter split last month.

Musk's renewed heckling of Trump's big tax breaks and spending cuts bill, which passed the Senate on Tuesday, threatens to put billions of dollars of his government contracts in jeopardy if Trump retaliates. The rupture of their tenuous peace has resulted in a wobbling of the stock price of a market-moving company and led the president to muse about deporting Musk to his native South Africa.

In a Frankenstein-style twist, as Musk volleyed fresh critiques about the cost of Trump’s signature legislation, Trump mused Tuesday about turning Musk's Department of Government Efficiency back on its creator.

“DOGE is the monster that might have to go back and eat Elon,” Trump told reporters as he left the White House for a tour of a new immigration detention center in Florida.

Trump also suggested in an early morning social media post that if Musk lost his government contracts, he “would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa.”

Asked by a reporter later if he would deport Musk, Trump paused and said, “I don’t know. We’ll have to take a look.”

In response, Musk wrote on X: “So tempting to escalate this. So, so tempting. But I will refrain for now.” Tesla and SpaceX did not respond to messages seeking comment about their CEO.

The big bill divide

Musk has called Trump’s big bill a financial boondoggle for America that would kill jobs and bog down burgeoning industries. He’s not limiting himself to harsh assessments on social media. On Monday, he threatened to reinsert himself into politics and try to oust every member of Congress who votes for the bill.

“They will lose their primary next year if it is the last thing I do on this Earth,” Musk said in one post.

In other posts, he branded Republicans “the PORKY PIG PARTY!!” and threatened to create a new political party.

Trump has said Musk is actually irritated by the legislation’s dramatic rollback of the Biden-era green energy tax breaks for electric vehicles and related technologies. Musk has denied this, but the rollback could hurt Tesla's finances.

“Elon may get more subsidy than any human being in history, by far, and without subsidies, Elon would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa,” Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social media network.

Musk became a U.S. citizen in 2002, according to a biography of him by Walter Isaacson. It’s unclear if Trump would take the extraordinary step of having the government explore the rare process of removing his citizenship, known as denaturalization.

Feud has high stakes for Musk

Musk’s rocket and satellite company, SpaceX, is also in Trump’s crosshairs.

“No more Rocket launches, Satellites, or Electric Car Production, and our Country would save a FORTUNE,” Trump said in his post. “BIG MONEY TO BE SAVED!!!”

SpaceX has received billions of federal dollars to help send astronauts into space and perform other work for NASA, including a contract to send a team from the space agency to the moon next year.

But the most immediate fallout of their feud was the tumbling stock in Tesla, down 5.3% on Tuesday.

Tesla stock’s performance can have an outsize impact on the stock market index funds in which millions of Americans’ 401(k)s have invested their retirement savings. The electric vehicle maker is one of the Magnificent Seven, the group of companies that includes Apple and Google parent Alphabet and that account for about a third of the value of the S&P 500.

Musk’s social media outbursts come at a delicate time for his car company. Tesla is just a week into its test run of its self-driving “robotaxi” service in Austin, Texas. Musk needs that test to succeed if he hopes to make good on his promise to investors that he will be able to quickly offer the service in other cities over the next few months.

One possible hurdle to that: federal safety regulators.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration requested information from Tesla last week after videos began circulating on social media of a few of its autonomous cabs in Austin driving erratically, including one heading down an opposing lane.

That followed a NHTSA request for data last month on how the driverless taxis will perform in low-visibility conditions, which itself followed an investigation last year into 2.4 million Teslas equipped with full self-driving software after several accidents, including one that killed a pedestrian.

Musk needs robotaxis to take off because Tesla's main business of selling cars is going poorly.

New fallout from the spat

Musk has acknowledged that boycotts by people angry with his political views have hurt sales, but he has largely blamed a less frightening, temporary factor: People are so excited about Tesla's forthcoming latest version of their Model Y SUV that they decided to hold off on purchases for a few months.

But now that the new version is available, and sales are still tanking. Figures out last week showed sales in Europe plunged 28% in May over the prior year, the fifth month in a row of big drops. A new batch of sales data, including the U.S. and other parts of the world, is coming out on Wednesday.

The irony is that Musk's social media spat with Trump threatens his businesses from both sides. People won’t buy his cars because of the memories of his friendship with Trump, and now that and his other businesses could get hurt because that friendship has soured.

“In a bizzarro world, he’s alienated both sides,” said Dan Ives, a Wedbush Securities financial analyst. “It seems impossible, but he’s actually done it.”

___

Condon and Chapman reported from New York.

Where Should You Invest $1,000 Right Now?

Before you make your next trade, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis.

Our team has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and none of the big name stocks were on the list.

They believe these five stocks are the five best companies for investors to buy now...

See The Five Stocks Here

Beginner's Guide To Retirement Stocks Cover

Enter your email address and we'll send you MarketBeat's list of seven best retirement stocks and why they should be in your portfolio.

Get This Free Report
Like this article? Share it with a colleague.

Featured Articles and Offers

Recent Videos

3 Cheap Growth Stocks Set to Explode This Summer
The Next NVIDIA? Quantum Computing Stocks Set for Explosive Growth
5 Stocks to BUY NOW in July 2025

Stock Lists

All Stock Lists

Investing Tools

Calendars and Tools

Search Headlines