Sunday , June 8 2025

Musk calls Trump’s tax bill a ‘disgusting abomination’

05-06-2025

WASHINGTON: Elon Musk has hit out at President Donald Trump’s signature tax and spending bill, describing it as a “disgusting abomination”.

The legislation which includes multi-trillion dollar tax breaks and more defence spending while also allowing the US government to borrow more money was passed by the House of Representatives in May.

“Shame on those who voted for it,” Musk said in a post on social media.

The tech billionaire left the administration abruptly last week after 129 days working to cut costs with his team, known as Doge.

The comments mark his first public disagreement with Trump since leaving government, after having previously called the plan “disappointing”.

The South African-born tech billionaire’s time in the Trump administration came to an end on 31 May, although Trump said that “he will, always, be with us, helping all the way”.

In its current form, the bill which Trump refers to as the “big beautiful bill” has been estimated to increase the budget deficit, the difference between what the government spends and the revenue it receives by about $600bn (£444bn) in the next fiscal year.

In a series of posts on X on Tuesday, Musk said that the “outrageous, pork-filled” spending bill will “massively increase the already gigantic budget deficit to $2.5 trillion (!!!), and burden America (sic) citizens with crushingly unsustainable debt”.

In American politics “pork” refers to spending on projects in lawmakers’ constituencies.

Musk, who had previously vowed to fund campaign challenges against any Republican that votes against Trump’s agenda, added a political warning in another post.

“In November next year, we fire all politicians who betrayed the American people,” he wrote.

Asked about Musk’s comments soon after the first post, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said “the President already knows where Elon Musk stood on this bill”.

“This is one, big, beautiful bill,” she added. “And he’s sticking to it.”

The legislation also pledges to extend soon-to-expire tax cuts passed during the first Trump administration in 2017, as well as an influx of funds for defence spending and to fund the administration’s mass deportations of undocumented immigrants.

It also proposes lifting the limit on the amount of money the government can borrow, known as the debt ceiling, to $4tn.

The comments from Musk reflect wider tensions among Republicans over the plan, which faced stiff opposition from different wings of the party as it worked its way through the House. The Senate has now taken it up, and divisions are already emerging in the Republican-controlled chamber.

Senator Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, has said over the last few days he will not support the bill if it includes the provision to raise the debt ceiling.

“The GOP (the Republican Party) will own the debt once they vote for this,” he told media, over the weekend.

Trump responded to Paul with a series of angry social media posts, accusing him of having “very little understanding of the bill” and saying that the “people of Kentucky can’t stand him”. “His ideas are actually crazy,” Trump wrote.

Republican lawmakers pushed back on Musk’s comments, with Senate majority leader John Thune telling reporters the party plans to “proceed full speed ahead” despite “a difference of opinion”. (Int’l News Desk)

Check Also

India plans earth magnet incentives as supply threat mounts

07-06-2025 Bureau Report NEW DELHI: India is holding talks with companies to establish long-term stockpiles …