Elon Musk aims his digital megaphone at Europe. Why?


With his rightward political turn and campaign spending, Elon Musk has already shaken up U.S. politics, helping Donald Trump win a second term and muscling into his inner circle. Now the billionaire entrepreneur is throwing his weight around in European politics.

In recent weeks, Mr. Musk has endorsed far-right parties and politicians in Europe and used X, the social media platform he owns, to push his brand of antiestablishment politics.

Why We Wrote This

Elon Musk’s efforts to influence European politics raise a host of questions about his business interests, and the degree to which he speaks for himself or President-elect Donald Trump.

By using his digital megaphone in Europe, he’s exerting influence on democracies that are already under pressure from populists on both the left and right amid roiling voter disenchantment.

For leaders in Europe, one question is whether Mr. Musk is telegraphing the views of Mr. Trump and laying the groundwork for a disruptive, “America First” foreign policy. But even if he’s simply speaking for himself, the reach of his posts on his digital platform, and the real-world effects they have already sparked, represent a rare concentration of power in one man’s fingers.

“I think he wants to bring a different world into being,” says Gary Gerstle, a professor emeritus of American history at the University of Cambridge. “He’s a great believer in disruption as being a key to a better future.”

With his rightward political turn and campaign spending, Elon Musk has already shaken up U.S. politics, helping Donald Trump win a second term and muscling into his inner circle. Now the billionaire entrepreneur is throwing his weight around in European politics.

In recent weeks, Mr. Musk has endorsed far-right parties and politicians in Europe and used X, the social media platform he owns, to push his brand of antiestablishment politics. He has praised Germany’s AfD party (Alternative for Germany), which has neo-Nazi ties and is being monitored for extremism by domestic intelligence agencies, as the only party that can “save” the country.

The AfD is running second in polls ahead of national elections scheduled for Feb. 23. On Thursday, Mr. Musk is hosting AfD leader Alice Weidel on a livestream on X; he also wrote a German newspaper opinion article in support of the party. In Italy, meanwhile, he has used his megaphone to blast judges in Rome who blocked the offshore processing of asylum-seekers and questioned whether an “unelected autocracy” was making decisions.

Why We Wrote This

Elon Musk’s efforts to influence European politics raise a host of questions about his business interests, and the degree to which he speaks for himself or President-elect Donald Trump.

The United Kingdom, and its center-left Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who was elected in July, has become a particular preoccupation for Mr. Musk. In a series of incendiary posts, Mr. Musk has called on Mr. Starmer to resign over the U.K.’s handling of decades-old child sex-abuse cases and asked his 211 million followers, possibly in jest, if the United States should “liberate the people of Britain” from its government. Last summer, amid antimigrant riots in U.K. cities fueled by misinformation on X and other platforms about the identity of the alleged killer of three schoolchildren, Mr. Musk claimed that “civil war is inevitable” and lambasted Mr. Starmer.

Politicians have grown thick skins in the era of social media, where anyone can post criticisms. And Mr. Musk isn’t alone as an influential billionaire or online provocateur. But when the criticism is coming from a confidant of the incoming U.S. president and from the world’s richest man, it’s impossible to ignore.

For leaders in Europe, one question is whether Mr. Musk is telegraphing the views of Mr. Trump and laying the groundwork for a disruptive, “America First” foreign policy. But even if he’s simply speaking for himself, the reach of his posts on his digital platform, and the real-world effects they have already sparked, represent a rare concentration of power in one man’s fingers.

Alice Weidel (third from left), co-leader of the German far-right party Alternative for Germany (AfD), attends an AfD election campaign event in front of the cathedral in Magdeburg, Germany, Dec. 23, 2024.

In a press conference Tuesday, Mr. Trump praised Mr. Musk while professing ignorance of his interventions in European politics. “You mean where he likes people that … tended to be conservative? I don’t know the people. I can say Elon’s doing a good job. Very smart guy.”

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