For nearly a year, Elon Musk played the part of tech advisor, MAGA court jester, and occasional policy crasher in the Trump White House. That ended this week—in a scorched-earth tweet calling Trump’s signature spending bill a “disgusting abomination” and shaming those who voted for it.
“I just can’t stand it anymore,” Musk posted, capping off a stretch of dramatic exits, broken promises, and black-eye photo ops that now feel less symbolic than literal.
The bill in question? A $3.8 trillion deficit bomb Trump proudly dubbed his “big, beautiful bill.” Musk isn’t laughing.
Elon Musk Has Had Enough of Trump—For Now

The tweet marks a definitive shift from passive-aggressive sniping to full-scale rebellion. Musk had already trashed the bill on CBS, saying it undermined the very budget-cutting task force he led—ironically, named DOGE.
But this isn’t just about numbers. It’s about bruised egos, broken influence, and Musk waking up to a hard truth: playing kingmaker in D.C. costs more than it pays.
Tesla’s stock has tanked. SpaceX is floundering under the weight of its own overpromises. Musk’s political stunt-casting is wearing thin. And now he’s walking—sort of.
I’m sorry, but I just can’t stand it anymore.
This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination.
Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 3, 2025
Behind the Scenes: From Whisper Fights to Purges
Sources say tensions between Trump and Musk had been building for weeks. Musk had clashed with Trump’s tariff architect, tanking Tesla’s international operations. He also reportedly pushed hard to install his personal pick—SpaceX millionaire tourist Jared Isaacman—as NASA administrator. That move was quietly crushed last week in what looks suspiciously like MAGA revenge.

Meanwhile, Musk’s own behavior in the White House has been described as “chaotic” and “painful,” complete with dad jokes, shouting matches, and press ops gone wrong. His supposed “departure” from politics last month? More performance art than actual resignation.
See also: Elon Musk Walks Away From Trump’s White House—But It’s Not Just About Time Management
Now What?
The split is ugly, and the stakes are high. Trump claims Musk isn’t really leaving. Musk hasn’t paid out a third of his $300 million pledge to get Trump re-elected. And the White House is openly ignoring his policy advice while punishing his allies.

It’s not clear whether Musk will retreat to Silicon Valley or keep lingering in D.C. like a ghost of tech bros past. What is clear: the most powerful man in politics and the richest man on earth are now locked in a slow, vicious divorce—with America stuck in the middle of their proxy war.
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