Over the weekend, June 10, Musk deleted some of his most inflammatory posts against Trump on Platform X, including calls for Trump's impeachment and claiming without evidence that Trump's name appeared in crime-related documents of sex offender financier Jeffrey Epstein. Musk, who appears to be wholeheartedly supportive of the Trump administration's stance on the situation in Los Angeles, added an emoji of the American flag under a post by Vice President J.D. Vance that said that "the president will not tolerate riots and violence." Musk has long supported closing borders, stopping illegal immigration, and deportations, in line with the Trump administration's position. Musk also retweeted a screenshot of Trump's post on Truth Social stating that California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass "should apologize to the people of Los Angeles" at a time of ongoing clashes, cars set on fire and protests intensified. He also commented "cool" under a video of Vance's interview, in which Vance said he thought "if Elon calmed down, everything would be fine." In addition, Tesla's CEO has refocused on White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, who is seen as one of the main leaders of the Trump administration's immigration policy, and Musk unfocused on Miller when his clash with Trump broke out last Thursday. However, this does not mean that Musk is completely positive about the Trump administration again this week. He continues to oppose (in a more subtle way) Trump's domestic policy bill, which has passed the House of Representatives and is currently being considered in the Senate. Wadebush analyst Dan Ives said, "At the end of the day, Trump needs Musk to stay in the Republican camp, and Musk needs Trump for a number of reasons, including giving the green light to the federal self-driving framework." (Golden Ten)
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Musk frequently expressed his goodwill towards Trump's camp during the riots in California.
Over the weekend, June 10, Musk deleted some of his most inflammatory posts against Trump on Platform X, including calls for Trump's impeachment and claiming without evidence that Trump's name appeared in crime-related documents of sex offender financier Jeffrey Epstein. Musk, who appears to be wholeheartedly supportive of the Trump administration's stance on the situation in Los Angeles, added an emoji of the American flag under a post by Vice President J.D. Vance that said that "the president will not tolerate riots and violence." Musk has long supported closing borders, stopping illegal immigration, and deportations, in line with the Trump administration's position. Musk also retweeted a screenshot of Trump's post on Truth Social stating that California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass "should apologize to the people of Los Angeles" at a time of ongoing clashes, cars set on fire and protests intensified. He also commented "cool" under a video of Vance's interview, in which Vance said he thought "if Elon calmed down, everything would be fine." In addition, Tesla's CEO has refocused on White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, who is seen as one of the main leaders of the Trump administration's immigration policy, and Musk unfocused on Miller when his clash with Trump broke out last Thursday. However, this does not mean that Musk is completely positive about the Trump administration again this week. He continues to oppose (in a more subtle way) Trump's domestic policy bill, which has passed the House of Representatives and is currently being considered in the Senate. Wadebush analyst Dan Ives said, "At the end of the day, Trump needs Musk to stay in the Republican camp, and Musk needs Trump for a number of reasons, including giving the green light to the federal self-driving framework." (Golden Ten)