Trump Says Musk ‘Really Can’t’ Serve in His Cabinet After Saying He Would Consider It
A week after saying he would “sure” Consider giving Elon Musk a Cabinet role in a possible second administration—and get one right away commit by Musk to serve—Donald Trump seems to be reconsidering the wisdom of that idea.
Speaking to a former Navy SEAL about this prospect, the former president speakReferring to the Tesla owner: “He wants to get in. Now look, he’s running big businesses and all that, so he can’t really—I don’t think he would [free for] Cabinet.” Trump added that while he would “certainly” nominate Musk for such a role—which would require Senate approval—he didn’t “know how he could do it with all the resources he has.” Trump went on to say that he would support Musk being an adviser.
As Daily Beast noteThe real reason Musk probably wouldn’t have a Cabinet position in a second Trump term is because he would face countless conflicts of interest, and as CNN reported last week, it wouldn’t be as simple as selling his shares in his company or putting his shares into a blind trust, because “Musk, Tesla’s CEO and largest shareholder, can’t just sell his shares without causing the stock price to collapse. And given the breadth of his business interests, it’s hard to see where he could serve without having to constantly say no.”
“It depends a lot on what the job is and how it relates to his economic interests,” Richard Briffault, a professor at Columbia Law School, told the news agency. “There is something will not related to his economic interests? I’m not sure what that would be.”
In other Trump-Musk news, Rolling Stone report that while Trump may lavish praise on the world’s richest man in public, such comments may not reflect the whole story:
In a statement, a Trump campaign spokesman said Rolling Stone that the former president and Musk “agree on the big issues facing our country, and that Kamala Harris must be stopped before she completely destroys America.” Musk currently heads a pro-Trump super PAC, which has so far spent $37 million for his re-election effort.