News

Musk risks political fallout by endorsing Trump. Few CEOs are following. 

As an uber entrepreneur, Elon Musk has blazed many trails in new technology. When it comes to politics, the path he’s forging may turn out to be a lonely one.

In the past month, the CEO has endorsed former President Donald Trump, then walked back a reported pledge of $45 million per month to the Republican nominee, saying the initial report was “simply not true.’’ He has vowed to fight the “woke mind virus” of gender transitions. And he has argued on X, the social media platform where Mr. Trump was suspended but later reinstated, that the Democratic Party has drifted too far left.  

Why We Wrote This

CEO Elon Musk has blazed many trails, including weighing in on politics, in contrast with many executives’ desire to avoid snares this election year.

Such overt political activity stands in sharp contrast with many American chief executives’ reluctance to get politically entangled this election year. Until Mr. Musk’s move, no Fortune 100 executive had donated to the former president’s current campaign. 

The reason: The risk to the reputations of themselves and their companies is becoming too great. 

As an uber entrepreneur, Elon Musk has blazed many trails in new technology. When it comes to politics, the path he’s forging may turn out to be a lonely one.

In the past month, the CEO has endorsed former President Donald Trump,  then walked back a reported pledge of $45 million per month to the Republican nominee, saying the initial report was “simply not true.’’ He has vowed to fight the “woke mind virus” of gender transitions. And he has argued on X, his social media platform, that the Democratic Party has drifted too far left.  

Such overt political activity stands in sharp contrast with many American chief executives’ reluctance to get politically entangled this election year. Until Mr. Musk’s move, no Fortune 100 executive had donated to the former president’s current campaign. 

Why We Wrote This

CEO Elon Musk has blazed many trails, including weighing in on politics, in contrast with many executives’ desire to avoid snares this election year.

The reason: The risk to the reputations of themselves and their companies is becoming too great. 

“Many are quite cautious,” says Bruce Freed, president and co-founder of the Center for Political Accountability, a nonprofit advocacy organization in Washington. “CEOs are looking to keep doors open” with both Republicans and Democrats.

Mr. Musk may be feeling the heat himself. On Tuesday, his electric vehicle (EV) company, Tesla, reported the lowest profits in five years. The slump has many causes, including slower-than-expected growth industry-wide and increased competition from carmakers with newer models. Some analysts worry that Mr. Musk’s political activity is also hurting the company, turning off liberal-leaning car buyers, who up to now have been Tesla’s bread-and-butter customers.

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

Tesla electric vehicles are parked at a Tesla dealer in Paramus, New Jersey, July 23, 2024. Tesla CEO Elon Musk has endorsed Donald Trump.

His preferred candidate, Mr. Trump, has vowed to end federal EV subsidies on the first day of his administration. 

Previous ArticleNext Article