Tech billionaire Elon Musk leaned on his proposal for an Independence Day poll on Friday toward President Trump’s dispute over “large, beautiful” spending and tax bills and to conduct an Independence Day poll online.
Hours before Trump signed the massive settlement plan into law, Musk asked his follower on social platforms whether X should continue to create the “American Party.” He first brought up the idea after his first public quarrel with the president earlier last month.
“Independence Day is a great time to ask if you want to be independent from a two-party (some would say one-sided) system!” he wrote. “Should we create the American Party?”
Tesla CEO, who also owns X, re-examines multiple investigations throughout the day and even glimpses of his potential strategy.
“One way to do this is to focus the laser on only 2 or 3 Senate seats and 8 to 10 House areas,” he shared in his subsequent post. “Given the edge of the legislation of the razor, this is enough to act as a decision to decide on controversial laws to ensure they serve the true will of the people.”
The poll is similar to one he set up for his followers last month, and it’s just the latest way Musk is trying to be with Trump and Republican lawmakers as the bill hits Trump’s table.
After hours of intense negotiations with the Republicans retained, the House passed the final bill.
When the Senate passed its own version of the big giants earlier this week, Musk threatened to support the main challenger of those who supported the legislation. In response, the president warned the billionaire that he could sign government contracts for many of his companies and opened up the possibility of expelling South African CEOs.
Musk left his senior Trump administration adviser position in late May after his special administration employee designation expired. He was initially eavesdropped to lead the efficiency of the presidential administration, a committee designed to root waste and fraud within the federal government.
While many question how long the relationship between the world’s wealthiest person and Trump will last, the rift begins when Musk criticized the settlement plan as “annoying abhorrent” and said it would be a “political suicide” for Republicans.
The president said he was disappointed with the analysis of the billionaire, which led to tensions among online men. Tesla’s sales have fallen since the argument.
Musk admitted at one point that his comments were “too far away” and that the ice seemed to be thawing, but disputes earlier this week were rekindled the bill – including extended Trump’s 2017 tax breaks and a comprehensive cut to Medicaid and energy tax credits.
“We made a promise, it was a promise, it was a promise, we kept them,” Trump said at the signing ceremony at the White House on Friday.
“This is a victory for the birthday of Democracy,” he continued. “And I have to say, people are happy.”