Elon Musk shaking over President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Building” on Tuesday, denounced the settlement package as “nasty hatred” in a massive break from the president just days after he left his role in the administration.
“I’m sorry, but I can’t stand it anymore,” Musk wrote on social media platform X:
Musk, whom Trump tapped to lead government efficiency to cut federal costs, criticized the bill for establishing Congress, turning Americans into Saddle Americans with “an already huge budget deficit of $2.5 trillion (!!!)” and “overwhelmingly unsustainable debt.”
His comments come as the bill is set to face Senate surveillance after handing over the House of Representatives a little bit last month.
Musk’s bomb attack on Trump’s precious megaville tells a dam-destructive moment for the billionaire presidential adviser after returning from his position last week as the end of a designated time as a special government employee is nearing the end.
Tesla’s CEO criticized some of the president’s policies while working for the government. But the harsh responsibilities of the law promoted by Trump, who said in May that the bill was “undetectedly the most important law to be signed into our country’s history,” marking the most serious division between Trump’s allies and the president.
White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt dispelled the criticism of the mask he posted while he was on the podium in the briefing room. “The president already knows where he is standing in this bill,” she said. “I won’t change the president’s opinion.”
Musk’s social media post encouraged some of the Republican critics of the package of settlement. Rep. Thomas Massey (r-ky.), one of two Republican asylums against last month’s bill, quickly boosted Musk’s Tilade by writing in an X post that he was “he’s right.”
And Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who repeatedly criticized Trump for his opposition to the bill on Tuesday, came out in support of Musk.
“I agree with Elon,” Paul wrote to X: Sen. Mike Lee (R-UTAH) also jumped on the post and replied to Musk, “The Senate must make this bill even better.”
But the message hit House Speaker Mike Johnson, who was working hard to push the bill through the House of Representatives.
Musk “come out and pan” GOP Megaville “so unfortunate,” Johnson told Capitol reporters.
The Post on Tuesday was not the first time Musk has expressed disapproval of Republican Megaville.
The former Doge principal criticized CBS News last week, criticising the bill, laying “disappointing to see the massive spending bill,” lamenting that it “damages the work the Doge team is doing.”
Musk’s role in Doge has fundamentally restructured Washington, but Trump’s allies have shown frustration with the administration in recent weeks, launching an attack on X over the administration’s sweeping tariffs that affected Musk’s business holdings by launching an attack on Trump’s trade adviser Peter Navarro.
Musk continued his tillard on the big beautiful bill Tuesday afternoon, lifting ante with Republicans in Congress. I reposted a tweet saying why GOP is spending money on “Ukrainian luxury hotels” or that they don’t vote for Doge Cuts.
“Next November we will fire all the politicians who betrayed the Americans,” Musk added to X.
A thinly covered threat could be a GOP financial albatross shortly after masked America poured millions into Trump’s reelection campaign and downballot races. In a series of posts of Mask, he backed up Massy.
Ali Bianco, Meredith Lee Hill and Ben Johansen contributed to this report.