
Elon Musk just took a flamethrower to his old alliance with Donald Trump. In a stunning move, Elon Musk backed a call for Trump’s impeachment and publicly endorsed JD Vance as his successor. The moment came when Musk replied “Yes” to a post on X suggesting Trump be removed and Vance take the reins. That’s not a slip—it’s a signal.
For everyday Americans, this feud isn’t just rich-guy drama. It could shape the future of the Republican party, government tech deals, and even the formation of a new centrist movement. Think fewer tax breaks for Musk’s companies—or fewer MAGA rallies with billionaire backing.

In short: the bromance is dead, and the knives are out.
Just days ago, Trump gave Musk a grand farewell from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)—a fake-sounding but real role Musk held. But tensions had been rising for weeks. Musk blasted Trump’s latest bill, calling it “a mountain of disgusting pork,” and urged Americans to tell lawmakers to kill the legislation.
This wasn’t just rhetoric. Musk then hinted at a bigger political shift, posting a poll on X:
“Is it time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?”
He didn’t stop there. Musk accused Trump of being in the unreleased Jeffrey Epstein files, writing:
“Time to drop the really big bomb: @realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files… Have a nice day, DJT!”
Cue chaos.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 5, 2025
Trump, never one to back down, threatened to cut off government contracts and subsidies to Musk’s companies. It’s a high-stakes game of chicken—with rockets, data centers, and billions of dollars at risk.
JD Vance, Musk’s newly endorsed alternative, has stayed quiet so far. But his sudden name-drop shows Musk is willing to back a different brand of conservative. A senator from Ohio and known Trump ally, Vance could become the tech billionaire’s new political project.
This isn’t the first elite feud to play out in public—but it may be the most consequential. It’s part ideology, part ego, and all very, very personal.
And here’s the absurd twist: not long ago, Musk and Trump were allies. Today, they’re trading impeachment threats and Epstein accusations on social media. As political analyst [insert credible source] notes, “This could split the conservative movement for a generation.”
For the average voter? The message is clear: Billionaire politics isn’t just about campaign donations anymore. It’s a real-time soap opera with real-world fallout.
Stay tuned—because if Musk does start his own party, the next election won’t be red vs. blue. It’ll be Musk vs. Everyone.
Also Read Trump Tariffs Will Crash the US Economy, Says Musk—$150B Gone in a Day