Regarding Trump’s important legislative items, Musk said, “I think the bill will grow, or it’s beautiful, but I don’t know if it’s both.”
SpaceX’s latest unmanned spacecraft rocket spins out of control
SpaceX’s latest unmanned spaceship disbanded within an hour of its launch.
WASHINGTON – No longer a White House fixture, Elon Musk said people unfairly blame the government for the efficiency of all the issues in the Trump administration.
“Doge is becoming a whiplash boy for everything,” Musk said in an interview with The Washington Post published May 27th.
Musk’s comments come when the government cut back on its job leading the Doges, who are enslaved. He’s been suffering from a massive loss of profits from his electric car company after he’s been in Washington, DC and Musk became a polarized figure as President Donald Trump’s chief sidekick.
Musk took part in a media interview this week from the headquarters of his company SpaceX in southern Texas, coinciding with the latest test flights of his spacecraft spacecraft.
“The situation with federal bureaucracy is much worse than I noticed,” Musk told the Post. “I thought there was a problem, but to say the least, it’s a tough fight to improve things at DC.”
Elon Musk “disappointed” over Trump’s tax bill
Elon Musk told CBS he was “disappointed” by President Donald Trump’s “big and beautiful” tax bill.
Musk: It’s not both, it can be big or beautiful
In another interview with CBS Sunday morning, Musk criticized Trump’s massive tax and spending bills for calling them “a massive and beautiful bill.” The bill, which includes Trump’s domestic agenda on items ranging from border security to tax cuts, passed the House last week along the party’s line. I’m heading to the Senate now.
“Frankly, I was disappointed to see the massive spending bill. This not only reduces it, it also increases the budget deficit and undermines the work the Doge team is doing,” Musk said.
The Non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimated the bill would add $3.8 trillion to citizen debt over the next decade.
“I think the bill will grow or it might be beautiful, but I don’t know if it’s both. My personal opinion,” Musk said in an interview.
Musk, the world’s wealthiest man and a Republican mega-donor who helped bankroll Trump’s 2024 campaign, said he intends to significantly cut political spending in future elections as he shifts his attention to his business empire.
“In terms of political spending, I think the future will be much less,” Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, told Bloomberg News at the Qatar Economic Forum on May 20. “I think I did it well.”
Reach Joey Garrison with X @joeygarrison.

